14th July 2026 | Shanghai, China
What We Saw
A spirits exporter was introduced to a promising Asian buyer through a Chamber of Commerce connection. The deal was signed smoothly, and both sides were pleased at the time.

However, one important detail was overlooked: the buyer was not from the FMCG sector and did not have a dedicated execution team. Once the stock arrived, it sat in the warehouse and moved very slowly. Trade shows, expos, and local promotions did little to change that.
The exporter’s Asia-based representative could see the problem clearly and proposed a practical solution: to provide direct support for on-the-ground sales execution. The idea was rejected.
Why? The exporter did not like the comparison(they are the top 10 exporters of the target market). As a strong market player in its own territory, the company felt that needing boots-on-the-ground sales support was beneath it. In the end, pride got in the way of a workable solution.
Why This Matters for Exporters
A closed deal is not the same as a sold product. If your buyer does not have FMCG capability — no sales team, no channel relationships, and no route-to-market experience — then you have not really secured distribution. You have only secured stock movement on paper.
This is one of the most common mistakes exporters make in Asia. The gap between a signed contract and actual shelf velocity is where many brands quietly lose momentum.

It is also a reminder that local market intelligence matters. When your on-the-ground representative identifies the issue and offers a practical fix, dismissing that advice because it feels uncomfortable can be expensive. Strong reputation in one market does not automatically translate into execution ability in another.
Takeaway for Exporters
Exporters need to screen buyers for execution capability, not just interest or enthusiasm. A Chamber introduction or signed agreement may look promising, but it means very little if the buyer does not have the team, structure, and market access to move product.

The real lesson is simple: pride does not move inventory. Pragmatism does. If your local team sees a route to better sell-through, listen carefully — even if the solution is not flattering.

