People across the country are about to usher in an eight-day long holiday, but for textile workers who work all year round, it seems to have nothing to do with the holiday. However, this year they had a few days of vacation, and they were excited but also nervous.
Your goods are slow
It means your remittance is also slow
Your goods are stopped
It means you have become a dishonest customer
You want The goods are never asked for payment
Congratulations on entering the VIP high-quality customer channel
The path is your choice
It is not determined by others
Thank you for your trust and support
But
Don’t delay my payment
I will not delay your goods
Payment is slow
Fast delivery
Good service
Who plays with you
My pursuit is to fully support customers
But you always ask for goods without paying for them
Then I can only say: Goodbye~
In 2020, foreign trade chargebacks and domestic sales are sluggish
Raw material prices continue to rise
Costs also rise
If my delivery is slow
That can only It means your remittance is also slow
In all walks of life, the phenomenon of payment suppression exists in the entire industry chain. . “Getting goods on arrears” has always been a “hidden rule” in the textile industry, and the issue of receivables is also a long-standing problem for textile people.
In this year’s survey, most textile workers said that they have suffered from receivables problems to one degree or another. trouble. The factory presses the money of the upstream companies, and the upstream companies have no choice but to press the money of the raw material manufacturers.
The speed of repayment determines the happiness index of all companies in the industry chain. Only the companies involved understand the waiting process. Medium flavor…
You really need to have the confidence to refuse payment.
Nowadays, the profits of the industry are getting lower and lower,
If you don’t get the payment once, it may be like working in vain for a year!
Are you ready to welcome the new era of “payment on delivery”?
Although due to long-standing habits, the mainstream of the textile industry is still “getting cloth on debt”, but in the transaction of raw materials, printing and dyeing and some in-demand products In the process, “delivery upon payment” has become the new normal. In addition, with the crazy price increases of dyeing fees, labor, raw materials and other products, the profits of the textile industry are getting thinner and thinner. If one payment is not received, the profits for a year may be gone. Therefore, we have reason to believe that this industry is moving towards the era of payment and delivery! </p