China Distributor Evaluation Scorecard: Rate Your Potential Partners
Selecting the right distribution partner in China requires a systematic, data-driven approach that goes beyond gut feelings and sales presentations. The China Distributor Evaluation Scorecard presented in this article provides foreign brands with a structured framework for comparing and rating potential distributors across five critical dimensions, with a weighted scoring system that produces a single comparable score for each candidate.
This scorecard has been developed based on extensive feedback from foreign companies that have established distribution networks in China, combined with best practices from leading market entry consultants operating across the country. The scoring system is designed to be adaptable — brands can adjust the weightings based on their industry, product type, and strategic priorities.
How to Use the Scorecard
The scorecard is organized into five assessment categories, each with specific evaluation criteria. Each criterion is scored on a 1-5 scale, where 1 = Does Not Meet Expectations, 2 = Partially Meets, 3 = Meets Expectations, 4 = Exceeds Expectations, and 5 = Significantly Exceeds Expectations. Category scores are calculated by averaging the criterion scores, then weighted according to the importance of each category for your specific business.
Category 1: Financial Health and Stability (Weight: 30%)
Financial stability is the single most important predictor of distributor reliability. A financially weak distributor may fail to maintain adequate inventory, delay payments to your company, or even collapse entirely, disrupting your market presence in China.
| Criterion | 1 (Poor) | 3 (Adequate) | 5 (Excellent) | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 Audited Financial Statements Available | No financial statements provided or refusal to share | 2-3 years of unaudited internal statements | 3+ years audited by reputable CPA firm | ___/5 |
| 1.2 Current Ratio | Below 1.0 (liquidity risk) | 1.0-1.5 (adequate) | Above 1.5 (strong liquidity position) | ___/5 |
| 1.3 Debt-to-Equity Ratio | Above 80% (overleveraged) | 50-70% (manageable) | Below 50% (conservative) | ___/5 |
| 1.4 Revenue Trend (3 years) | Declining revenue for 2+ years | Stable or modest growth (5-10%) | Consistent growth above 15% annually | ___/5 |
| 1.5 Profitability | Net losses for 2+ consecutive years | Break-even or modest profit (1-3% margin) | Consistent profitability above 5% net margin | ___/5 |
| 1.6 Payment History (bank references) | Negative references or overdue payments | Mixed but generally on-time within 30 days | Consistently on-time or early payments | ___/5 |
| 1.7 Credit Rating Score | D or E rating (high risk) | B or C rating (moderate risk) | A or AAA rating (low risk) | ___/5 |
Category 1 Average: ___ / 5 | Weighted Score (× 30%): ___ × 0.30 = ___
Category 2: Operational Capability and Infrastructure (Weight: 25%)
A distributor’s physical and technological infrastructure directly determines their ability to handle, store, and deliver your products effectively across China’s challenging geography.
| Criterion | 1 (Poor) | 3 (Adequate) | 5 (Excellent) | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1 Warehouse Condition and Capacity | Small, disorganized warehouse with inadequate capacity | Adequate-size warehouse in good condition, organized storage | Modern, well-organized, appropriately-sized, with climate control if needed | ___/5 |
| 2.2 Warehouse Location (strategic positioning) | Remote location far from target markets or transport hubs | Located in a reasonable provincial logistics hub | Strategically located with access to expressways, ports, and rail terminals | ___/5 |
| 2.3 Fleet Size and Condition | No owned fleet, exclusively subcontracts | Small owned fleet supplemented by subcontractors | Adequate owned fleet with modern vehicles, GPS tracking, temperature control as needed | ___/5 |
| 2.4 Warehouse Management System (WMS) | No digital WMS — manual paper-based system | Basic WMS with inventory tracking capability | Advanced WMS with real-time visibility, barcode/RFID, ERP integration | ___/5 |
| 2.5 Inventory Accuracy | Unable to demonstrate inventory accuracy; frequent discrepancies | Periodic inventory counts with 90-95% accuracy | Continuous cycle counting with accuracy above 98% | ___/5 |
| 2.6 Geographic Coverage vs. Territory | Claims national but covers only home province | Covers target region but with gaps in Tier-2/Tier-3 cities | Full coverage of target territory including lower-tier cities | ___/5 |
| 2.7 Cold Chain Capability (if applicable) | No cold chain equipment, no temperature monitoring | Basic cold chain with limited temperature monitoring | Certified cold chain with IoT temperature monitoring, backup systems, qualified personnel | ___/5 |
Category 2 Average: ___ / 5 | Weighted Score (× 25%): ___ × 0.25 = ___
Category 3: Commercial Capability and Market Access (Weight: 25%)
The distributor’s commercial strength determines how effectively they can penetrate target markets, sell your products, and build brand presence. This category evaluates sales capability, customer relationships, and marketing effectiveness.
| Criterion | 1 (Poor) | 3 (Adequate) | 5 (Excellent) | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.1 Sales Team Size and Quality | Fewer than 5 sales staff, no dedicated team for foreign brands | 5-15 sales staff, one dedicated to your product category | 15+ sales staff, experienced with foreign brands, dedicated team lead | ___/5 |
| 3.2 Channel Relationships (retailers, e-commerce, specialty chains) | Limited relationships in target channels | Established relationships with key accounts in 2-3 channels | Deep relationships across multiple channels including modern retail, e-commerce, specialty | ___/5 |
| 3.3 Reach to Lower-Tier Cities | No presence outside Tier-1 cities | Established in Tier-1/2 cities, limited Tier-3 reach | Strong distribution network extending into Tier-3 and Tier-4 cities | ___/5 |
| 3.4 Digital Commerce Capability | No e-commerce platform presence or management capability | Basic Tmall or JD store management via third-party | In-house team managing Tmall, JD, Douyin, Xiaohongshu with proven sales performance | ___/5 |
| 3.5 Brand Portfolio (complementary vs. competitive) | Represents 2+ direct competitors to your brand | Represents complementary brands with no direct conflict | Portfolio of complementary premium brands with walled-garden arrangements | ___/5 |
| 3.6 KOL/Livestream Commerce Network | No KOL relationships or livestream capability | Basic relationships with micro-influencers | Established network of top-tier KOLs and agency relationships for livestream sales | ___/5 |
| 3.7 Minimum Purchase Capacity | Unwilling to commit to any minimum purchase | Accepts reasonable minimum purchase but below your target | Accepts minimum purchase at or above your target level | ___/5 |
Category 3 Average: ___ / 5 | Weighted Score (× 25%): ___ × 0.30 = ___
Category 4: Legal and Compliance Standing (Weight: 15%)
Legal and compliance issues in China can have severe consequences for foreign brands, including regulatory investigations, brand damage, and financial penalties. This category evaluates the distributor’s compliance culture and legal history.
| Criterion | 1 (Poor) | 3 (Adequate) | 5 (Excellent) | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4.1 Court Record (China Judgments Online) | Multiple adverse judgments for payment defaults or contract breaches | No material adverse judgments in past 3 years | Clean court record — no adverse judgments ever | ___/5 |
| 4.2 Tax Compliance Status | D rating or below (tax credit rating) | B or C tax credit rating | A or AAA tax credit rating | ___/5 |
| 4.3 Industry License Validity | Missing required licenses or expired permits | Required licenses current but limited scope | All licenses current with broader scope than needed | ___/5 |
| 4.4 IP Protection Track Record | History of trademark squatting or counterfeit involvement | No known IP violations | Active IP protection culture with documented policies and cooperation with brand owners | ___/5 |
| 4.5 Dispute Resolution History | Currently involved in material commercial disputes | Past disputes resolved without adverse impact on partners | No commercial disputes in past 5 years, or disputes resolved amicably | ___/5 |
| 4.6 Anti-Corruption Compliance | No anti-corruption policies; known gifts/entertainment culture | Written anti-corruption policy but limited enforcement | Comprehensive compliance program with training, reporting, and enforcement | ___/5 |
Category 4 Average: ___ / 5 | Weighted Score (× 15%): ___ × 0.15 = ___
Category 5: Strategic and Cultural Fit (Weight: 5%)
While less quantifiable than financial or operational criteria, strategic alignment and communication compatibility significantly influence partnership success over the long term.
| Criterion | 1 (Poor) | 3 (Adequate) | 5 (Excellent) | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.1 English Language Capability | No English capability among management | One bilingual contact person; basic English reporting | Multiple bilingual staff; English-language reporting and meetings standard | ___/5 |
| 5.2 Reporting Frequency and Quality | Quarterly or ad-hoc reporting; poor data quality | Monthly reports with acceptable detail and accuracy | Weekly or real-time reporting; detailed sell-through data, inventory visibility, market intelligence | ___/5 |
| 5.3 Long-Term Orientation | Focuses exclusively on short-term volume; no brand development interest | Accepts brand development goals but prioritizes volume | Strong brand-building orientation with documented marketing investment | ___/5 |
| 5.4 Willingness to Share Data | Refuses to share sell-through, inventory, or customer data | Shares basic sell-through data upon request | Proactively shares comprehensive data including end-customer analytics | ___/5 |
| 5.5 Cultural Compatibility | Significant communication style differences; frequent misunderstandings | Adequate communication with occasional cultural friction | Strong rapport; management team has experience working with Western brands | ___/5 |
Category 5 Average: ___ / 5 | Weighted Score (× 5%): ___ × 0.05 = ___
Score Calculation and Interpretation
TOTAL WEIGHTED SCORE
___ / 5.00
Calculation Formula: Total = (Cat1 × 0.30) + (Cat2 × 0.25) + (Cat3 × 0.25) + (Cat4 × 0.15) + (Cat5 × 0.05)
Score Interpretation Guide
| Total Score | Assessment | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| 4.0 – 5.0 | Excellent — Strongly Recommended | Proceed to contract negotiation. This distributor meets or exceeds standards across all categories. Conduct final legal review of contract terms. |
| 3.0 – 3.9 | Good — Recommended with Conditions | Proceed but address specific weaknesses in the contract. Lower-scoring criteria should be covered by additional contractual protections (shorter notice period, stricter reporting requirements, performance guarantees). |
| 2.0 – 2.9 | Fair — Proceed with Caution | Serious concerns exist. Consider this distributor only if no better alternative exists and if contractual protections can mitigate the identified risks. Require bank guarantees or letters of credit for initial orders. Re-evaluate after 6-month trial period with limited territory or product scope. |
| Below 2.0 | Poor — Not Recommended | Discontinue evaluation. The risks significantly outweigh the potential benefits. Continue searching for alternative distributors. |
Scorecard Summary Table
For comparing multiple distributors side by side, use the following summary table:
| Category | Weight | Distributor A | Distributor B | Distributor C |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Financial Health | 30% | ___ × 0.30 = ___ | ___ × 0.30 = ___ | ___ × 0.30 = ___ |
| 2. Operational Capability | 25% | ___ × 0.25 = ___ | ___ × 0.25 = ___ | ___ × 0.25 = ___ |
| 3. Commercial Capability | 25% | ___ × 0.25 = ___ | ___ × 0.25 = ___ | ___ × 0.25 = ___ |
| 4. Legal & Compliance | 15% | ___ × 0.15 = ___ | ___ × 0.15 = ___ | ___ × 0.15 = ___ |
| 5. Strategic & Cultural Fit | 5% | ___ × 0.05 = ___ | ___ × 0.05 = ___ | ___ × 0.05 = ___ |
| TOTAL | 100% | ___ | ___ | ___ |
Additional Qualitative Factors (Not Scored)
These qualitative factors should be documented separately and discussed in the evaluation team meeting:
- Personal chemistry with key decision-makers: Trust-based relationships are essential in Chinese business culture. Did your negotiation team establish genuine rapport?
- Distributor’s reputation for terminating relationships: Inquire discreetly with industry contacts about how the distributor has handled past partnership dissolutions.
- Quality of references — beyond what’s provided: Independent references obtained through your own industry network carry more weight than provided references.
- Distributor’s technology adoption trajectory: Is the distributor investing in digital transformation, or are they falling behind industry standards?
- Sub-distributor quality and control: For multi-tier distribution models, evaluate the quality and reliability of the distributor’s sub-distributor network.
- Willingness to co-invest in market development: Distributors willing to share marketing costs or invest in dedicated sales resources demonstrate stronger commitment.
