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Questions to Ask Before Hiring a Sports Gear Manufacturer 

Questions To Ask Before Hiring A Sports Gear Manufacturer

After months of research, I was dreaming about my sportswear brand. I sketched the designs, picked the colors, and named my collection. I was sitting with a sports gear manufacturer, ready to make it all.

But, in the back of my mind, I was thinking about the questions to ask before hiring a sports gear manufacturer. Am I asking the right questions? What if I missed something? If you are in the same situation, you are not alone. This is where many startups feel lost.

In this guide, we will walk through every question you need to ask. We are not giving only a list. But to teach you what a wise question and good answer sound like. And what are the warning signs to watch for? Let’s make sure that voice in the back of your mind is quiet — because you know exactly what to ask.

Questions to Ask Before Hiring a Sports Gear Manufacturer: The Checklist

Let’s check out step by step the questions you should ask at every stage of your journey.


1. Beginners Level: Before You Even Reach Out

Most people rush to find a manufacturer before they know what they need. That mistake can cost you months of wasted time. Let’s fix that right now, before you send a single email.

Q1

What Are Your Non-Negotiables?

Every brand has things they will not bend on. For example, you only want recycled materials or a certain certification. Or you refuse to work with factories that treat their workers in a bad way.

Write these down. Keep the list short, like three to five things. If a manufacturer can’t meet you, walk away. No exceptions. This makes decisions easier later.

Q2

What Is Your Realistic Order Volume?

Many new brand owners lie about this. They tell the factory, “I’ll order 5,000 pieces,” hoping to get a better price. But when it’s time to place the real order, they can only afford 500.

This backfires. The factory loses trust. The price they gave you was for big orders, so your small order costs way more. You end up embarrassed and over budget.

Instead, tell the truth. Say, “I’m starting with 300 pieces and want to grow from there.” A good manufacturer will respect that honesty and work with you.

Q3

What Is Your Target Price vs. the Real Cost?

Ask yourself: What price do I need to sell at? Then work backwards. If your customer will pay $60 for a cotton t-shirt and the store takes 50%, you have $30 left. Shipping, tags, packaging, and your profit all come out of that $30. The factory price needs to be low enough to make this work.

If the math doesn’t add up, don’t panic. You may need to adjust your design, simplify the fabric, or start with a smaller profit. But it’s better to know this now than after you’ve already spent money.

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We are ready to help brand owners figure out realistic order volumes, fabric costs, and profit goals — before you ever contact a factory.

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2. The Core Questions You Must Ask

Most guides give you a list of questions to ask. That’s helpful, but it’s not enough. You also need to know what a good answer sounds like and what should make you pause. Here are the big ones, explained.

Q4

What Is Your MOQ, and How Do Prices Change with Order Size?

MOQ means “minimum order quantity.” It’s the smallest number of pieces the factory will make for you in one order.

Something like: “Our MOQ is 100 pieces per design. If you order 500, the price drops by 15%.” Simple and easy to understand.
If they say, “It depends, let’s talk later,” that’s a warning sign. Good factories are upfront about their numbers.
Q5

How Long Does Sampling Take? How Long Is Full Production?

You need to know two timelines. First, how long to make a sample you can approve? Second, how long does it take to make the full order after you approve that sample?

“Samples take 2 to 3 weeks. After you approve, production takes 4 to 6 weeks, plus shipping time.”
“Soon” or “next month” are not real answers. You need dates you can plan around.
Q6

How Do You Check Quality?

Every factory should have a clear answer here. Quality control means they check the activewear apparel before shipping it to you. Nobody wants to open boxes full of crooked stitches or wrong colors.

“We check fabric when it arrives, check stitching during production, and do a final check on every piece before packing.”
If they say, “Don’t worry, everything is good quality,” but can’t explain how they check, that’s a problem. Good factories are proud of their quality system.
Q7

What Are Your Payment Terms and Methods?

Payment terms mean how you pay and when you pay. This is important because money is at risk.

A common and fair payment structure is: pay a small amount to start (like 30%), then pay the rest (70%) after the goods are ready and checked, before they ship.

⚠ Watch out for these warning signs:
  • They ask for 100% payment upfront before starting any work.
  • They only accept payment through methods that cannot be traced or refunded, like some wire transfers or apps.
  • They pressure you to pay fast with a “special deal” that expires soon.

A trustworthy manufacturer will offer normal payment methods and give you a clear invoice. They won’t rush you or hide details.

Q8

What Customization Can You Do?

Sports gear is made in different ways. Each method works best for certain types of material. You need to know which one fits your design.

Sublimation
Best for full-color, all-over prints. The design becomes part of the fabric. Great for bold team jerseys. Works only on polyester fabrics. MOQ is often low or even one piece.
Cut-and-Sew
Best for unique shapes and panels. The fabric is cut and stitched together piece by piece. Works with many fabric types. MOQ is usually higher.
Hybrid
Mix of both. For example, a sublimated body with cut-and-sew sleeves. Gives you design freedom but costs more.
A good manufacturer can explain which method fits your design and why. A great one will suggest the best option even if you didn’t know about it.
A bad manufacturer says yes to everything without explaining how it works. That can lead to a final product that looks nothing like your sketch.

The Questions Nobody’s Asking, But Smart Brands Do

Most people ask the same basic questions and stop there. But the best brand owners dig a little deeper. These six questions separate the pros from the beginners. And they can save you from a bad partnership.

Q9

Can I Speak With Two Current Clients in My Niche?

A good factory will happily connect you with happy customers. If they say no or make excuses, that’s a red flag. Talking to real clients lets you ask the honest questions you can’t ask the factory. If nobody speaks with you, somebody might be hiding something.

Q10

What Happens When Something Goes Wrong?

Mistakes happen. What matters is how the factory fixes them.

“We send photos within 24 hours and offer a remake or refund for defective pieces.”
If they say mistakes never happen, they are not being honest.
Q11

Show Me Your Fabric Testing Documentation

Sportswear fabric must perform. Ask for test reports on wicking, stretch recovery, and pilling resistance. A real factory will have these papers ready. If they look confused or say testing isn’t needed, their fabric might fail after a few washes and workouts.

Q12

Who Exactly Is My Day-to-Day Contact?

You need one real person, not a company email address. Ask their name, their English level, and their working hours. If your only contact leaves, what happens to your order? One single point of contact with no backup is a risk you should know about before you start.

Q13

How Do You Handle Design File Revisions?

Changes happen. Maybe you adjust a logo size or change a panel color. Ask if revisions cost extra, how many are free, and how long they take. A clear process means fewer surprises later. If they say, “We’ll figure it out,” that often means extra charges are coming your way.

Q14

What Is Your Shipping Error Rate and Resolution Timeline?

Every factory makes shipping mistakes sometimes. A good factory tracks its error rate and can tell you the number. A better factory also tells you how fast they fix problems. If they can’t give you any numbers, they are not tracking quality closely enough.

Skip the Awkward Questions

We’ve Already Done the Digging for You

These tough questions can feel awkward to ask. We have already done the digging for you. We will satisfy your needs before you want to place an order.

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After the Contract: Questions for the Ongoing Relationship

Signing the contract is not the finish line. It’s the starting line. The way you work together after signing matters just as much as everything before. These four areas keep your partnership healthy as your brand grows.

Q15 — Setting Up a Communication Cadence That Works Across Time Zones
Agree on a regular check-in schedule right away. For example, a quick message every Monday and a longer update once a month. Decide which app or email you’ll use so nothing gets lost. When time zones are different, a set rhythm stops small problems from becoming big ones.
Q16 — Agreeing on Escalation Triggers Before You Need Them
Decide together what counts as an emergency. A late shipment by one week? A quality issue on more than 5% of pieces? Write down the rules now, when everyone is calm. Then agree on what happens next — like a direct phone call instead of email. This avoids panic and blame later.
Q17 — Batch Consistency Check-Ins: How to Spot and Stop Quality Drift Early
Quality can slowly slip over time without anyone noticing. Ask for photos or a short video check of every new batch before it ships. Compare each batch to your approved sample. Catching a small drop in quality early stops you from receiving a full order of clothes you can’t sell.
Q18 — Planning for Scale: When Do You Outgrow This Manufacturer?
A factory that works great for 500 pieces might struggle with 5,000. Ask them honestly what their maximum comfortable capacity is. Watch for signs like late deliveries or rushed replies as your orders grow. Know the moment when you need to find a bigger partner — not after things break.

Decoding What You Hear — The Red Flag Translator

Asking questions is step one. Step two is listening carefully to the answers. Some responses sound fine on the surface but are actually warning signs. Here are five common answers that should make you pause — and what they really mean.

1. “Yes, No Problem” to Everything You Ask
It feels good when a factory says yes to all your requests. But no factory can do everything perfectly. Over-agreeing usually means they just want your deposit and will figure things out later or cut corners. A trustworthy partner will sometimes say, “That’s difficult, but here’s what we can do instead.” Honesty is better than easy yeses.
2. Vague Turnaround Answers
If you ask about timelines and hear “soon,” “around next month,” or “it depends,” pay attention. Clear factories give clear dates. Vague answers often mean the factory is overloaded with work or not organized well. Your order might sit waiting while they handle other clients. Always push for a specific date, not a guess.
3. Defensiveness About Factory Visits
A good factory is proud of its workspace and welcomes visits. If they get uncomfortable, make excuses, or say visits are “not allowed,” something might be hidden. It could be poor working conditions, messy production lines, or even a middleman pretending to be the real factory. Always ask why a visit isn’t possible and watch their reaction closely.
4. Pricing Too Good to Be True
We all love a great price. But a quote that is much lower than everyone else’s is a warning, not a win. Hidden costs almost always show up later — cheaper fabric, rushed stitching, surprise shipping fees, or incorrect logos. Ask for a full cost breakdown. If they can’t explain why the price is so low, walk away.
5. “We’ve Never Had That Issue”
Every factory has faced problems before. Late shipments, printing errors, loose threads — it happens in this business. When a factory claims they’ve never had any issue, they are either lying or not paying attention to quality. A better answer sounds like, “That happened once, and here’s how we fixed it.” That shows they learn and improve.

FortStitch: Master Supplier Answers to All Your Questions

After reading all the questions — what if you get a partner who already knows all the answers? Yes, FortStitch is not only one that will give you all the answers. But also a shortcut to sports gear manufacturing. From boxing equipment to all your gym apparel needs. We provide end-to-end solutions for all your requirements. We have built our name on quality, trust, and honesty. You will get clear answers to all your questions.

Your Manufacturing Partner Awaits

Stop Guessing. Start Building.

Stop guessing. Stop worrying. FortStitch turns your questions into a smooth, safe production journey. Check our whole collection before starting your conversation.

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Closing

After walking through this guide, you have a complete toolkit. From a basic question before you collaborate, to the most important ones nobody asks. You also know how to spot a red flag in a friendly way. You know how to end the contract. The difference between a poor launch and a successful one is never luck. But how do you get prepared? Always ask smart and choose smart.


FAQs

Q1. What are some questions to ask a manufacturer?

Ask about their minimum order quantity, production time, quality checks, payment terms, and past clients. Also, ask what happens when mistakes occur and who your daily contact will be.

Q2. What is the rule of 5 for clothing?

The rule of 5 says you should only buy clothes you will wear at least 5 times. It helps reduce waste, save money, and build a wardrobe you truly love and use.

Q3. What are some problems in the clothing industry?

Common problems include worker mistreatment, fabric waste, pollution, copied designs, late shipments, and quality that drops after the first order. Transparency and fair practices are still rare in many factories.

Q4. What are some questions to ask about fashion?

Ask who made the clothes, what fabrics are used, how trends affect production speed, and whether the brand pays fair wages. Also, ask how long the garment is designed to last.

Q5. What is the 3-3-3 rule in fashion?

The 3-3-3 rule helps you pack light. Choose 3 tops, 3 bottoms, and 3 pairs of shoes that all mix and match. This creates many outfits from just 9 pieces.

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