Supply Chain Services

agent

Provide customers with comprehensive logistics solutions

Supply Chain Services

A logistics supply chain service provider refers to an enterprise or individual that provides logistics related services, from goods transportation, warehousing management, order processing, to supply chain management, and so on.
They provide customers with comprehensive logistics solutions, combining the logistics of goods transportation with existing supply chains, thereby helping customers improve efficiency, shorten delivery times, and gain an advantage in market competition.

In international trade, in addition to direct business negotiations and transactions between buyers and sellers, reliable customers can also be selected to establish agency relationships in some countries or regions according to business needs. One important reason for entrusting a foreign agent is that the agent is familiar with the local market and the actual situation of the buyer. We can use the favorable conditions of the agent in the local market to help us expand, consolidate, and expand the export market.
Procurement agency is a new type of material procurement model, whose characteristics of low cost, efficiency, and speed will continue to be recognized by more enterprises, becoming a new choice for many enterprises to reduce procurement costs.
Supply chain finance refers to the phenomenon where financial institutions provide comprehensive financial services to a single enterprise or multiple upstream and downstream enterprises in an industrial supply chain, promoting the stability and circulation of the "production supply sales" chain of core enterprises and upstream and downstream supporting enterprises, and collaborating with financial capital and industrial economy to achieve the healthy development of the entire supply chain. The supply chain refers to a network structure formed by upstream and downstream enterprises involved in providing products or services to end-users during the production and circulation process. The basic structure of the supply chain includes suppliers, manufacturers, distribution enterprises, retail enterprises, and consumers, and generally includes four processes: material circulation, commercial circulation, information circulation, and capital circulation.