Vietnam has become one of the most attractive manufacturing destinations in Asia. Competitive labor costs, improving infrastructure, strong trade agreements, and China+1 strategies have pushed thousands of international buyers to explore Vietnamese factories. But while opportunity is high, so is risk. On paper, many suppliers look capable. On the ground, reality can be very different.
This is where factory due diligence separates successful sourcing from costly mistakes. At IndoViet, due diligence is not a checklist exercise—it is a disciplined, boots-on-the-ground process designed to uncover operational truth, not just supplier claims.
Vietnam’s manufacturing ecosystem is diverse and fast-evolving. Alongside world-class factories are subcontractors, trading companies posing as manufacturers, and facilities stretched beyond their real capacity. Language barriers, informal business practices, and rapid expansion add further complexity.
A factory that passes a basic desktop review can still fail when it comes to delivery timelines, quality consistency, compliance, or ethical standards. IndoViet’s approach focuses on reducing these risks before contracts are signed, not after problems arise.
The first on-ground check starts with legal authenticity. IndoViet verifies whether the supplier is a registered manufacturer, a trading company, or a hybrid operation. This includes:
Business registration licenses and tax codes
Factory land-use rights and operating permits
Ownership structure and affiliated entities
This step is critical in Vietnam, where it is common for sales offices to present themselves as factories or for one licensed entity to operate multiple undisclosed production sites. Understanding who actually controls the factory determines accountability later.
Capacity claims are often optimistic. IndoViet physically walks the production floor to confirm:
Number and condition of machines
Actual production lines versus advertised capacity
Workforce size, skill level, and shift patterns
Bottlenecks in critical processes
For example, a factory claiming high monthly output may rely heavily on overtime or subcontracting during peak seasons. IndoViet flags these dependencies early, allowing buyers to assess scalability and delivery risk realistically.
Many Vietnamese factories can show quality manuals, but implementation is what matters. IndoViet evaluates how quality is managed day-to-day:
Incoming raw material inspection
In-process quality control checkpoints
Final inspection and defect handling
Traceability and documentation discipline
Rather than focusing only on certifications, IndoViet looks at how supervisors and line workers actually respond to quality issues. A factory with fewer certificates but strong internal discipline often outperforms a paper-compliant supplier.
Undisclosed subcontracting is one of the biggest risks in Vietnam. IndoViet investigates:
Whether production is fully in-house
Which processes are outsourced and why
Approval systems for subcontractors
Controls over quality and IP at third-party sites
This is especially important for buyers in regulated industries or those with strict brand compliance requirements. IndoViet ensures there are no surprises after orders are placed.
Social compliance is no longer optional. IndoViet conducts practical, observation-based assessments covering:
Working hours and overtime practices
Wage payments and labor contracts
Health and safety conditions
Dormitories and canteen facilities, where applicable
Rather than policing factories, IndoViet evaluates risk exposure. Some issues are fixable with corrective action plans; others indicate systemic problems that make a supplier unsuitable for international buyers.
A factory struggling financially can pose serious continuity risks. IndoViet looks for red flags such as:
Heavy dependence on one or two customers
High employee turnover
Delayed wage payments or supplier dues
Rapid expansion without capital backing
While detailed audits may not always be possible, on-ground signals often reveal whether a supplier is stable, overstretched, or operating on thin margins.
One of the most overlooked aspects of due diligence is leadership quality. IndoViet evaluates:
Decision-making authority on site
Responsiveness to issues and corrective actions
Transparency in communication
Willingness to align with international buyer expectations
A capable factory with a defensive or opaque management style can become a long-term operational headache. IndoViet prioritizes partners, not just producers.
Factory due diligence is not about finding a “perfect” supplier—such factories rarely exist. It is about understanding risk clearly and early, then making informed sourcing decisions.
In Vietnam’s dynamic manufacturing landscape, assumptions are expensive. IndoViet’s on-ground due diligence gives buyers clarity on what a factory can truly deliver, where risks lie, and whether those risks are manageable.
For companies entering Vietnam or scaling their sourcing footprint, this disciplined approach transforms uncertainty into structured confidence—and turns supplier selection into a strategic advantage rather than a gamble.
Get practical insights on cross-border expansion, market entry strategies, digital growth, and Southeast Asia business trends delivered straight to your inbox.
We help businesses expand confidently across India, Vietnam, and Southeast Asia through market entry consulting, growth marketing, and technology-driven execution.