how do new startup companies outsource labor for a cheaper price?
May 24, 2009 7:35 PM
What if I want to outsource a product to another country to get it made cheap. How do I do that?
I am interested in selling a 'good' that has a small amount of labor-intensive sewing. I have read and heard about women starting small companies( like purses , etc.) and outsourcing the work to other countries to get the product made. How do they do that, how would I look into it or even potentially start something like this?
Thank you so much for all ideas!
I am interested in selling a 'good' that has a small amount of labor-intensive sewing. I have read and heard about women starting small companies( like purses , etc.) and outsourcing the work to other countries to get the product made. How do they do that, how would I look into it or even potentially start something like this?
Thank you so much for all ideas!
The snag that surfaces time and again with outsourcing is knowing what you must specify and at what level of detail. The more complex the task, the more critical it is to understand how to specify things. For example, in your sewing project, what happens if you say "sew this seam". With what kind of thread? With what spacing between the stitches?
When you get that sorted, -now- think of how much you are giving away by having the work done. Several people I know who successfully make things in China use multiple pieces that are made in geographically separate places so the function of the parts isn't obvious. This keeps the people who have the molds or presses from selling the assembly themselves.
posted by jet_silver at 10:25 AM on May 25, 2009
When you get that sorted, -now- think of how much you are giving away by having the work done. Several people I know who successfully make things in China use multiple pieces that are made in geographically separate places so the function of the parts isn't obvious. This keeps the people who have the molds or presses from selling the assembly themselves.
posted by jet_silver at 10:25 AM on May 25, 2009
This thread is closed to new comments.
But it pays to do your homework, as you may find that sewn products contractors in the Caribbean, under section 807/9802 type tariffs, may have faster turn around and lower overall costs, due to cheaper, shorter shipping arrangements and favorable Customs action, even though they have higher wage costs.
You do need a somewhat higher level of business sophistication to act as a foreign contractor and importer, particularly in terms of working within the byzantine channels of international import trade finance; at a minimum, you'll need a banking relationship that enables you to raise conditional letters of credit to your supplier, which are actionable by your customs brokers and shipping agents, so that the release of goods from your supplier is assured to meet your standards, and that shipping proceeds without embargo of your goods. Once money is transferred to your supplier in normal trade finance channels, you generally have no recourse, beyond that of your continuing/future relationship with that supplier; it is normally impractical to return defective merchandise, for example, due to shipping costs, and so provisions for consumer warranties, product safety, etc. will likely fall entirely on you, as the importer.
posted by paulsc at 11:54 PM on May 24, 2009