Common issue: promotional profile, not sourcing answer
Many suppliers write “source factory, good price, customization, reliable quality.” Those statements may be true, but they do not help a buyer decide whether the supplier fits a specific order.
MapleBridge needs structured capability: product scope, MOQ, certification, sample timing, packaging support, and North America order experience.
| Too vague | More matchable |
|---|---|
| Professional earbuds factory, customization supported | Bluetooth earbuds factory, MOQ 300, FCC documents available, FBA FNSKU labeling, seven-day samples |
| Beauty packaging manufacturer, good price | Existing serum bottle and cream jar molds, 1,000-3,000 low MOQ, silk screen, hot stamping, label, 7-10 day samples |
| Apparel source factory, good quality | Yoga apparel and active tops, small-batch trial support, fabric weight, size chart, hangtag, polybag customization |
| Leather goods factory, OEM/ODM | Wallet, bag, and leather accessories factory; does not produce pet care liquid or cleaning paste |
Fields North America buyers check first
Buyers usually ask whether the supplier can handle this order before they care about company history. Specific fields help both the system and the buyer.
| Field | Buyer question |
|---|---|
| Product scope | What do you actually make, and what do you not make? |
| MOQ | Can you accept my first order size? |
| Certification | Does this fit the US, Canada, or platform requirement? |
| Samples | Can I verify with lower risk first? |
| Packaging | Can you support private label, FBA, color box, or labels? |
| Delivery | How long do sample and production take? |
| Boundaries | Which adjacent requests are not a fit? |
AI matching needs facts, not slogans
AI can interpret natural language, but it still needs factual signals. The more comparable the supplier profile is, the easier it is to create an explainable match.
This is why secondary correction of raw text matters. The system must identify real product use case and avoid mixing wigs, pet care, leather goods, or cosmetic packaging only because keywords overlap.
- State specific products, not only broad categories.
- State MOQ and order boundaries.
- Describe certification scope instead of saying “certificates complete.”
- Explain sample and packaging execution.
- Mention target-market experience such as US, Canada, Amazon FBA, or Shopify.
A more matchable supplier profile structure
A supplier can use a short but structured profile so both buyers and AI systems see more than promotional language.
| Module | Suggested content |
|---|---|
| One-line positioning | Product + factory type + target-market experience |
| Core products | List 3-8 primary products, not everything imaginable |
| Order boundary | MOQ, samples, proofing, production lead time |
| Certification and documents | Certificates, reports, platform documents, whether retesting may be needed |
| Customization | Packaging, logo, color, material, FBA, barcode support |
| Not a fit for | Adjacent categories the supplier does not handle |
FAQ
Should a supplier profile be very long?
Not necessarily. It should be specific enough for buyers to judge fit.
Why state what the supplier does not do?
Boundaries reduce bad matches, such as treating a leather goods factory as a pet leather care product supplier.
Can a Chinese profile be used for North America buyers?
Yes, if the key fields are structured clearly enough for cross-language matching.