Custom kitchenware prototypes and multi-material product samples

Common Pain Points Brands Experience When Working with a Kitchenware Products Manufacturer

Choosing the right manufacturing partner can save your brand years of costly mistakes.

The reality of the manufacturing marketplace is it’s highly competitive, and price is often the largest driving factor for many customers. When choosing a factory to work with, there is a saying in China: ‘There is always someone willing to offer a lower price.’

In a price-driven environment like kitchenware and lifestyle product manufacturing, finding a sustainable manufacturing partner that genuinely understands your brand is harder than it looks. The temptation to go with the lowest price is real, but choosing a lower-cost manufacturer carries serious risks that can bite you in the long run and even bring your business to an abrupt close.

The true cost of manufacturing is not in the unit price, but in choosing the wrong service provider.

Failing to deliver on product quality, strict timelines, and accurate communication creates a broad range of pain points, often negating the ‘savings’ you were initially excited about. The result often amounts to higher overall costs, massive disruptions in operations, and damage to your brand’s reputation.

Your start-up or more established brand faces hidden expenses at every turn. Defective products, poor-quality control, and the need for rework and engineering of new iterations can result in an item costing many multiples of the original price paid when the product doesn’t hit the mark.

Ever had to have an entire shipping container returned due to faulty products after it had already been sent across the ocean? Sounds fun, right? No, it doesn’t. It’s extremely painful and can cause great emotional stress and heartache in addition to the financial losses incurred throughout the process.

Major pain points to avoid when developing your new kitchenware product design:

As a custom OEM kitchenware products manufacturer of over 20 years, we’ve learned competing purely on price is not a sustainable path for our business, and it’s the same for our customers. The fact is, many customers are simply focused on getting the lowest price possible, and they only realise the true cost once they’ve made a mistake. We’ve seen this happen many, many times, and it’s truly painful to watch.

At A Life Works, we do not compete on the lowest price. We focus on delivering the right level of quality for your target market, and on providing you with long-term value. Our preferred customers understand genuine value and quality, and this is why some of them have stayed with us for a decade or more. Here is what you risk if you chase the lowest price on the market:

Quality and Safety Failures

Quality control inspection of custom salt and pepper mills
  • Factories Not Truly Understanding Requirements: Many manufacturers say ‘Yes’ to everything you request to get you over the line, but they don’t understand your brand positioning, quality standards, packaging needs, or market expectations. Having a holistic understanding of all these factors offers the highest chance of a successful outcome.
  • Substandard Products: Lower-cost manufacturers need to use cheaper materials, lower-grade components, and they cut corners on production techniques to maintain their paper-thin margins.
  • High Rejection Rates and Rework: Your brand needs to waste time, money, energy, and emotion re-working, repairing, or throwing away faulty products, resulting in high failure costs you didn’t account for.
  • Safety Hazards and Recalls: Inferior quality outcomes lead to product recalls, legal liability issues, and safety risks - for example, the use of toxic materials or dangerous components. Your start-up brand’s reputation could be severely damaged before it even gets a chance to shine!

Operational Timeline and Supply Chain Disruptions

Global export and shipping for OEM kitchenware manufacturing
  • Extended Production Lead Times and Delays with Shipping: Cheaper suppliers often have weaker logistics and communications, leading to unpredictable, long production times and late product deliveries. The biggest cost to your business is not price itself, but losing 6 months to failed development, endless revisions, or in missing the entire selling season.
  • Production Bottlenecks: The failure to supply a specific component can grind your entire production process to a halt, leading to lost sales and missed market opportunities. Don’t miss the boat (literally, i.e. sea freight)!
  • Lost Time and Energy Costs for Communication: When working with a lower quality factory, customers often need to chase for updates, solve problems daily, and manage delays on their own. Add to the fact the potential for no one at the factory who can speak English, and you’ve thrown some painful spanners in the works.
  • High Management Overheads: Your business may often need to devote unexpected management time to inspecting goods, resolving quality disputes, and ‘putting out fires’, as opposed to having time to focus on growing your brand’s identity and bottom line.

Financial and Contractual Hazards

  • Good Samples, Bad Mass Production: A sample prototype may look great, but mass-production can have inconsistent quality, wrong colours, poor assembly, and packaging errors. You may have thought making a product was easy, but if you’re experienced, you know it isn’t. That said, you’d be even more wrong if you thought scaling quality production was easy. It is not; it’s hard.
  • Hidden Costs Cancelling Out Initial Savings: Any savings on price you thought you’d received are often wiped out by unplanned costs, such as additional tooling charges, increased air freight fees, and unexpected warehousing expenses. Cheap prices often mean expensive problems later.
  • Project Price Creep and the ‘Old Bait-and-Switch’ Tactic: Some factories quote low prices to win the contract, but later their prices increase, or they demand high costs for ‘variations’ required to complete the originally agreed-upon project scope.
  • Dependency on Unreliable Partners: Relying on a single low-cost supplier leaves your business vulnerable to production stoppages if they encounter financial distress. Additionally, they may not have high levels of quality control for their contracting partner relationships – any break in the chain can end up breaking the bank!

Strategic and Reputational Damage

  • Damaged Customer Trust: Receiving poor-quality goods leads to customer complaints, negative online reviews, and high churn rates, which can take years to repair. Is it worth the risk?
  • Intellectual Property (IP) Theft: Lower-cost factories often have lower levels of professionalism and morality. You see this all throughout China (and the world!) These factories disregard IP agreements and NDAs, selling copies of your brand’s products behind your back to recoup the losses they incurred by charging you so low. At A Life Works, this unscrupulous behaviour is judged harshly, and this goes for all our partner suppliers and facilities. If anyone breaks the rules, they lose our cooperation, and we’re not afraid to tell others the truth about these people’s negative actions.
  • Lost Market Position: Delays in production and flawed products allow competitors to gain market share while you sit waiting, wondering if you’ll ever get a chance to compete or show the world who you are.

The True Cost of Choosing a Low-Cost OEM Manufacturer in China

As a new business owner, or even as someone who knows their business well, hidden costs are an unfortunate issue you need to mitigate. The cost of poor quality (COPQ) manufacturing typically equals 15%-20% of total sales revenue, and the true cost of a bad component is often 100 times its initial price. 100 times. Think about that.

Here are a couple real-life examples:

Recently, we spoke to the manager of our glass factory about this topic. He told us many other factories he knows of, and who we compete with, either fail to deliver after receiving a deposit, or deliver products with considerably poor-quality outcomes. This type of issue happens often in the glass industry. It’s extremely important to choose a solid partner.

Another story involves one of our Scandinavian customers who needed to source a component for their new product design, a specific part which falls outside of our own areas of specialisation. (We produced all their other parts.)

After thoroughly researching over 300 factories, we chose four to visit together with our customer when they came to see us in China, as they’d passed our stringent litmus tests. Our customer wanted to go with the cheapest option of the bunch, but after visiting these four factories, what our team (and the customer) discovered was made painfully clear: the only factory who could genuinely meet the customer’s requirements was also the most expensive, and by a significant margin.

Our role is to clearly understand each customer’s real needs and provide the most accurate solution. In this instance, in the end, and following our guidance, our customer chose the most expensive option. The key issue for success is not solely price; it’s understanding.

If a customer only focuses on price, they will usually think we are too expensive, but this is fine with us. The truth is, like you, our own time is limited. We wait for the right customers – those who understand genuine value and quality. Otherwise, our cooperation becomes difficult and inefficient.

This is where our value comes in. We’re not simply selling a product; we are providing a service. Our strength is in accurately understanding what a customer truly needs, and then delivering exactly what we promise, with reliability and clarity. If we hadn’t personally visited these factories, our client would have almost certainly chosen one of the other three options; basically, they had already made up their minds to do so. In the end, they dodged a bullet, and it would have been a costly mistake. In researching these factories, we learned the priority was often to first make the sale, and then deal with problems later, often by offering spare parts and expecting the customer to handle replacements on their own.

It’s completely normal to find cheaper options in China. However, the reality is there are many hidden risks and quality issues in these lower-priced choices. This starts right at the beginning of the quotation process. Price mismatches are quite common in business. A factory needs multiple rounds of communication to fully understand the customer’s quality requirements and target price before adjusting their pricing accordingly.

In many cases, due to insufficient early communication, factories may not fully grasp your actual needs, resulting in a relatively low quotation – this is quite normal. Sometimes our own initial quotes can seem relatively high, but once we gain more information, we’re able to bring them down. This is the problem of taking a first quote and making the final judgement in your search for a custom OEM manufacturing partner.

At A Life Works, we are proud to be professional and reliable. We know what separates reliable sustainable manufacturing companies from those who disappear once the order deposit clears. This is how we've carved out our own space in such a price-driven environment.

A Life Works Offers Certainty in an Uncertain Marketplace

Custom kitchenware design consultation and OEM product development

How does one navigate and overcome the inevitable challenges of developing a product with an international partner factory?

At A Life Works, we’re not only a factory; we’re your manufacturing partner who specialises in finding solutions to your problems. We’ll transform your designs and concepts into successful products, reducing risk all along the way. A Life Works is not simply providing a manufacturing service, and we don’t solely provide you with OEM/ODM branded products. We provide certainty.

Our team is known for its extremely high level of support, both in terms of engineering and product development, as well as helping you every step of the way throughout your product’s iterative production process. Communication is our superpower.

We respond to messages and emails daily, have staff in English-speaking countries, and our CEO is a Taiwanese Australian who brings a unique flavour to our Chinese production facility.

Our engineers review your 3D product design and will let you know where it can be improved for functionality, user experience, and even cost efficiency – showing you where you can make subtle adjustments to achieve lower cost outlays.

Why do we do this? If your product is successful, we get to do more mass-production runs. It’s a win-win scenario.

Filtering Supply Chain Risks

A Life Works hasn’t survived the manufacturing industry’s ups and downs over the last two decades. We’ve thrived. This is because we know which material suppliers and partner factories are reliable, and which low prices covertly hide future problems.

Understanding Western Markets

After spending over twenty years developing products for major international brands across Australia, Europe, the USA, Japan, New Zealand, and Scandinavia, we know the requisite level of quality, materials, designs, packaging, and compliance standards needed for success.

Transparent Pricing

A Life Works doesn’t win projects with low prices and then add hidden costs later. We are not the cheapest factory, but we’ll undoubtedly help you avoid the biggest mistakes.

Experience-Based Decisions

Years of real manufacturing experience guides each project uniquely, promptly, and correctly. 

Try A Life today; and you’ll see and feel the difference.