Author: Jouth Zhao, Senior Engineer, Dengtai Staircase Manufacturing Co., Ltd.
Verifying product quality before it leaves the factory saves time, money, and the operational disruption of discovering non-conforming products after they arrive at your site. This guide covers the four verification methods available to importers — from basic documentation review to on-site third-party inspection.
Four Verification Methods
Method 1: Documentation Review (Cost: Free)
Review the supplier’s QC documentation package before approving shipment:
- Mill Test Certificates (verify material grade against specification)
- Coating Thickness Report (verify against your specified minimum)
- Dimensional Inspection Report (verify against approved drawing)
- Weld Inspection Report (verify quality level)
- Photographs of the completed products
Best for: Trusted suppliers, standard products, repeat orders with established quality history.
Method 2: Video Inspection (Cost: Free)
Request a live video call walkthrough of your completed products at the factory:
- Ask the supplier to show each ladder type from multiple angles
- Request close-up views of welds, coating, and labels
- Ask them to measure reference dimensions on camera
- Record the video call for your records
Best for: New supplier relationships, medium-sized orders where third-party inspection cost is disproportionate.
Method 3: Third-Party Inspection (Cost: $300-800/day)
Engage an independent inspection company (SGS, Bureau Veritas, TÜV, Intertek) to visit the factory and inspect your products before shipment:
| Inspection Point | Method | Acceptance Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Dimensional check | Tape measure, caliper | Within ±3mm of drawing |
| Coating thickness | Digital gauge (5+ points per component) | ≥ specified minimum |
| Weld quality | Visual per ISO 17637 | ISO 5817 Level C or B |
| Material verification | PMI (Positive Material Identification) gun for SS | Chemistry within specification |
| Packaging | Visual inspection | Per packaging specification |
| Quantity and labeling | Count and verify | Per packing list |
Best for: New suppliers, large orders (>$10,000), regulated industries, first-time importers.
Method 4: Your Representative at Factory (Cost: Travel expenses)
Send your own engineer or procurement representative to witness production and inspection:
- Highest confidence level — you see exactly what you are getting
- Can resolve specification questions in person
- Travel cost may be justified for orders >$50,000
Best for: Very large orders, critical-path projects, when you need to build supplier relationship in person.
When to Inspect
| Order Value | Recommended Verification |
|---|---|
| <$2,000 | Documentation review (Method 1) |
| $2,000-$10,000 | Documentation review + video inspection (Methods 1+2) |
| $10,000-$50,000 | Third-party inspection (Method 3) |
| >$50,000 | Third-party inspection + consider factory visit (Methods 3+4) |
Related Resources
FAQ
Q: When should the inspection happen?
Before the final balance payment and before the goods are loaded into the container. This gives you leverage — if inspection reveals non-conformances, the supplier must correct them before you release payment.
Q: What if the inspection fails?
The supplier must correct the non-conformances and schedule a re-inspection. For minor issues (labeling, documentation), correction may take 1-2 days. For major issues (dimensions, material), correction may require partial re-production. Always build 1-2 weeks of buffer into your schedule for inspection and potential correction.
Q: Does Dengtai accept third-party inspection?
Yes. We welcome third-party inspection by any recognized inspection agency. We have hosted SGS, Bureau Veritas, TÜV, and client-appointed inspectors at our factory. Our QC team cooperates fully with third-party inspectors.
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