A man in a suit studies papers on International Distribution Contracts at a desk with maps, in an office overlooking a harbor with a docked cargo ship and warehouses outside the window.

International Distribution Agreements: Beware the Eager Distributor

International Distribution Agreements: Beware the Eager Distributor In one matter my law firm handled, a manufacturer of industrial coatings signed an exclusive Southeast Asia distribution agreement with a distributor that looked ideal. It had regional warehousing, relevant sales experience, and a management team that sounded sophisticated from the first call. Eighteen months later, the manufacturer

Watercolor illustration of a world map with lines connecting continents, three silhouetted figures, and abstract paper textures in the foreground.

Foreign Contractors and Distributors: Frequently Asked Questions

Foreign Contractors and Distributors: Frequently Asked Questions Yesterday’s post explained why the overseas sales shortcut so often backfires: a company calls someone a contractor, agent, or distributor, but the relationship underneath does not match the label. This FAQ builds on that post. It answers the questions we most often hear from companies selling abroad without

A man in a suit stands by a crate with paperwork at an industrial dock with warehouses, a cargo ship, shipping crates, a crane, and a freight train under a cloudy sky.

Foreign Contractors and Distributors: The International Sales Shortcut That Often Backfires

Foreign Contractors and Distributors: The International Sales Shortcut That Often Backfires Many companies want foreign sales without a foreign footprint: no subsidiary, no payroll, no local employees, no leased office, no permanent commitment. That can be a sensible way to test a market. But for many businesses, that first move into international sales is also

Two men shake hands in an office filled with engineers and machinery, overlooking a cityscape and harbor through large windows. Beware the Hong Kong Company—opportunity here often comes with unexpected challenges.

The Hong Kong Intermediary Trap: Do Not Bind the Wrong China Company

The Hong Kong Intermediary Trap: Do Not Contract with the Wrong China Company Foreign buyers like dealing with Hong Kong intermediaries. The emails are clear, the invoices look familiar, the bank account feels safer, and the person on the other end usually speaks better English than the factory contact. But in China manufacturing, invoices are

Two contracts side by side: a rejected English “Manufacturing Agreement” on the left and an approved China Manufacturing Contracts document on the right, set against industrial and shipping backgrounds with a Chinese flag.

China Manufacturing Contracts: Why Your Draft Does Not Work

China Manufacturing Contracts: Why U.S. Drafts Do Not Work Clients often send us a U.S. manufacturing agreement and ask whether it can save time or money on a China manufacturing contract. It cannot. Sometimes the ask is smaller: can we just spend a couple of hours reviewing it? We decline because we will not bill

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