Key takeaway: A strong export RFQ is not just a product wish list. It also tells the supplier how the order needs to move, where it needs to go, and what flexibility the buyer has on current stock or project-surplus timing.
Lead with the working product range
Point the RFQ toward the right family first, whether that is the porcelain and sintered hub, Porcelain & Sintered Stock Deals, or Quartz Stone Stock Deals. That keeps the offer anchored to real supply.
State the shipment and destination clearly
Packaging, loading logic, and container planning change when the buyer is shipping into different markets. That is why destination and order scale should be part of the first brief, not an afterthought.
Use support pages as trust support, not filler
Trust-building pages like Factory & Export Support help the buyer understand how sampling, lot flexibility, and shipment coordination will be handled after the quote stage.
Once the brief is clear, route it through Request a Quote so the response can be shaped around commercial supply, not generic browsing.