Every sourcing relationship starts somewhere. Maybe you found the factory on a trade portal, got a referral from another buyer, or met them at a trade show. Before your first purchase order goes out, there’s a question that matters more than price, lead time, or the samples they sent you: is this actually a factory that can deliver what they’re promising?
Supplier verification — properly done — answers that question before you’re exposed to the risk of a failed first order.
The Factory Visit Isn’t Enough
Many buyers travel to visit factories before placing orders. This is worthwhile, but a buyer’s visit and an independent audit are fundamentally different things. A buyer visiting a factory sees what the factory wants to show — the showroom, the senior management, the best production line. An independent inspector with a structured audit protocol goes further.
They ask for payroll records and cross-check them against observed worker numbers. They look at the machinery registry and identify equipment age and maintenance status. They talk to workers on the floor, not just the production manager. They check capacity claims against actual floor space and shift patterns.
What a Supplier Verification Audit Should Cover
| Verification Area | What You’re Assessing |
| Legal & Business Status | Business license, export licence, registered address vs. actual location |
| Production Capacity | Real capacity vs. stated capacity, current order backlog |
| Quality Management | QC team structure, in-house testing, defect tracking |
| Technical Capability | Equipment list, relevant certifications, sample-making ability |
| Financial Stability | General impression of financial health, payment terms behaviour |
| Labour Practices | Worker numbers, overtime practices, employment documentation |
Red Flags to Watch For
The most common red flags in supplier verification audits across Vietnam, India, Thailand, and Indonesia: the registered business address doesn’t match the production facility, which is a sign that the entity you’re contracting with may not be the one making your goods; stated capacity significantly exceeds floor space and headcount, a classic oversell that leads to sub-contracting or missed lead times; no documented quality management system despite the supplier positioning itself as quality-focused; and reluctance to provide documentation or restrict access to certain production areas.
Vietnam and India: Specific Considerations
Vietnam’s rapid growth as a sourcing destination means a significant number of factories are relatively young. A structured Factory Audit Vietnam for a new Vietnamese supplier should pay particular attention to sub-contracting arrangements, since many factories still rely on overflow partners for peak season capacity — and those partners may not have been assessed at all.
In India, the diversity of manufacturing clusters means verification standards can vary sharply by region and sector. A leather goods factory in Agra operates under very different conditions than a pharmaceutical supplier in Hyderabad. Conducting a proper Factory Audit India tailored to the sector and location is far more informative than applying a generic onboarding checklist across the board.
Building a Verified Supplier Base Over Time
The payoff from rigorous supplier verification isn’t just avoiding bad first orders. Over time, buyers who systematically audit and maintain a verified supplier list gain a real competitive advantage — shorter lead times because they don’t lose months on failed supplier relationships, lower inspection costs because they concentrate orders on known-good suppliers, and better leverage in price negotiations because they can demonstrate that their orders are worth having.
In markets like Vietnam and India where supplier quality varies enormously, a verified shortlist of reliable factories is genuinely valuable. Building one takes time and consistent investment in the audit process — but the returns compound.

