10 Questions to Ask Before Choosing a Cashmere Knitwear Manufacturer
Publish Time: 2026-07-06 Origin: WFS Cashmere
Table of Contents
You have done the research. You have attended the trade shows. You have a shortlist of three or four cashmere manufacturers who look credible on paper.
Now comes the part that separates the brands that scale successfully from the ones that spend two seasons recovering from a bad supplier decision.
The right manufacturer is not the one with the most impressive website or the lowest sample price. It is the one who can answer these ten questions — clearly, specifically, and without hesitation.
Use this list in every supplier evaluation conversation. The answers will tell you everything you need to know.
Why Supplier Evaluation Matters More Than Ever in 2026
The cashmere sourcing landscape has changed fundamentally. European and North American brands now face a dual pressure that did not exist five years ago: rising compliance requirements from regulators (EU CSRD, CSDDD, California SB 253) and rising quality expectations from consumers who have become genuinely sophisticated about what they are buying.
A manufacturer who cannot meet your compliance documentation requirements is not just an inconvenience — they are a legal and reputational liability. A manufacturer who cannot maintain consistent quality across repeat orders is not just frustrating — they are a brand-building obstacle.
The ten questions below are designed to surface both categories of risk before you place your first order — not after.
The 10 Questions
Question 1: What certifications do you hold, and can you provide the current certificates?
This is the opening question for a reason. The answer tells you immediately whether you are dealing with a manufacturer who treats compliance as a core business function or as a marketing claim.
What you are looking for:
Third-party certifications, not self-declarations
Current certificates (check the expiry date — an expired OEKO-TEX certificate is meaningless)
Certificates that match the scope of what you are buying (a GOTS certificate for dyeing does not cover fiber sourcing)
The certifications that matter most for cashmere:
Certification | What It Covers | Why It Matters |
OEKO-TEX Standard 100 | Harmful substance testing in finished product | Consumer safety; required by many EU retailers |
GOTS | Organic fiber chain of custody + social criteria | Required for any "organic" claim |
BSCI / SMETA | Social compliance audit (labor, safety, wages) | Required by most European luxury buyers |
SEDEX | Supply chain ethical data sharing platform | Standard for UK and EU retail compliance |
ISO 9001 | Quality management systems | Indicator of process discipline |
A manufacturer who holds all five — and can produce current certificates on request — has made a significant investment in compliance infrastructure. That investment does not happen by accident.
Related reading: OEKO-TEX vs. GOTS vs. BSCI: Cashmere Certifications Explained →
Question 2: What is your actual production capacity, and what is your current utilization rate?
Capacity claims are easy to make. The question that reveals the truth is utilization rate.
A factory claiming 1,000,000 pieces annual capacity that is running at 95% utilization has almost no room for your order — or for the growth you are planning. A factory running at 60% utilization can absorb your program, grow with you, and give your orders the attention they deserve.
What you are looking for:
Specific numbers, not ranges ("600,000 pieces annually" vs. "large capacity")
Monthly capacity broken down by product type or gauge
Honest conversation about peak season constraints
The follow-up question: "What is your lead time during your busiest production months?" Peak-season lead times reveal real capacity constraints that headline numbers obscure.
Question 3: Where does your cashmere fiber come from, and how do you verify its quality?
Fiber origin and quality verification is where the gap between marketing and reality is widest in the cashmere industry.
What you are looking for:
Specific origin (Inner Mongolia Grade A is the benchmark; "Mongolia" without specifics is vague)
Micron count documentation (luxury cashmere is typically 14–16.5 microns; ask for test reports)
Fiber length data (longer fibers pill less — this is a quality indicator most brands never ask about)
Whether the manufacturer sources fiber directly or through intermediaries (each intermediary adds a traceability gap)
The question that separates serious manufacturers: "Can you provide a fiber test report for a recent production run?" A manufacturer with genuine quality control will have this immediately available. One who cannot produce it is relying on supplier claims rather than verification.
Question 4: What is your minimum order quantity — and what happens if I need to reorder below that minimum?
MOQ conversations reveal a manufacturer's actual business model and who their ideal client is.
A factory built for luxury conglomerate volume programs will have MOQs that make sense for 10,000-piece orders but are prohibitive for a brand placing 300 pieces per style. A factory built for brand development will have structured flexibility for smaller initial orders with clear scaling expectations.
What you are looking for:
MOQ per style, per colorway, and per fabric/gauge — these are often different numbers
Whether sample and development orders count toward MOQ
The reorder policy: can you reorder 150 pieces of a bestseller, or does the MOQ reset?
Whether there is a price differential for orders below standard MOQ
The honest answer you want: A manufacturer who explains their MOQ structure clearly — including the tradeoffs — is more trustworthy than one who tells you "we can do any quantity" without qualification.
Question 5: What does your development process look like, from brief to approved sample?
The development process is where most sourcing relationships either build trust or begin to unravel. A manufacturer with a disciplined, documented development process will deliver consistent results. One operating on informal communication and verbal agreements will create problems that compound over time.
What you are looking for:
A defined timeline with milestones (tech pack review → first sample → revision → approval)
Clear communication protocols (who is your point of contact? What is the response time commitment?)
Sample pricing and whether development costs are credited against production orders
How many revision rounds are included before additional charges apply
The question that reveals process maturity: "Can you walk me through the last development project you completed for a brand at my scale?" Specific examples reveal whether their process is real or aspirational.
Question 6: How do you handle quality control, and what happens when something goes wrong?
Every manufacturer will tell you their quality is excellent. The question that matters is what happens when it is not.
What you are looking for:
In-line QC (during production) vs. end-of-line QC (after production) — in-line is significantly more effective
AQL (Acceptable Quality Level) standards — ask what AQL level they inspect to
Whether they have an internal QC team or rely on third-party inspection
Their policy on defective goods: replacement, credit, or dispute?
The scenario question: "If I receive a shipment with 8% defect rate, what is your process?" The answer reveals whether their quality guarantee is a real commitment or a sales line.
Question 7: What is your standard production lead time, and what are the variables that affect it?
Lead time is one of the most frequently misrepresented numbers in manufacturing conversations. The "standard" lead time quoted in a sales meeting often does not account for fabric development time, holiday shutdowns, peak season delays, or the reality that your order is not the only one in the factory.
What you are looking for:
Lead time broken down by phase: development, bulk fabric production, cut-and-sew, finishing, QC, shipping
The difference between lead time for repeat orders (existing fabrics) vs. new development
Holiday and peak season blackout periods
What the manufacturer considers a "rush" order and what it costs
The planning question: "If I place a confirmed order today, what is the earliest realistic ship date?" Today's date, applied to their actual production schedule, is more useful than any general lead time claim.
Related reading: Cashmere Knitwear Production Lead Time Guide →
Question 8: Can you provide references from brands at a similar scale to mine?
References are standard practice in almost every B2B relationship. In manufacturing, they are surprisingly rarely requested — and even more rarely followed up on.
What you are looking for:
References from brands in a similar category (luxury vs. contemporary vs. DTC)
References from brands at a similar order volume
Permission to contact the reference directly, not just a written testimonial
The reference conversation to have: Ask the reference brand specifically about: (1) quality consistency across multiple seasons, (2) communication during problems, and (3) whether they would recommend the manufacturer for a brand at your stage.
A manufacturer who cannot provide references — or who provides only testimonials without direct contact information — is telling you something important.
Question 9: How do you approach sustainability, and what documentation can you provide?
As covered in our recent analysis of European luxury brand sourcing trends, sustainability documentation has shifted from a differentiator to a baseline requirement for any brand selling into regulated markets.
What you are looking for:
Specific certifications (see Question 1) rather than general sustainability language
Carbon footprint documentation or willingness to provide it
Fiber traceability: can they document the chain of custody from raw fiber to finished garment?
Social compliance: worker welfare, fair wages, safe working conditions — with audit evidence, not just policy statements
The compliance question: "If my compliance team requested a full supply chain audit, what would that process look like and what documentation would you be able to provide?" The answer reveals whether their sustainability claims are audit-ready or aspirational.
Related reading: Why European Luxury Brands Are Rethinking Their Cashmere Supply Chain in 2026 →
Question 10: What does a long-term partnership with your factory look like?
This is the question most brands forget to ask — and it is the one that determines whether a supplier relationship becomes a genuine competitive advantage.
A manufacturer who thinks in terms of transactions will optimize for the current order. A manufacturer who thinks in terms of partnerships will invest in understanding your brand, anticipate your development needs, and become a genuine extension of your product team.
What you are looking for:
Evidence of long-term client relationships (how long have they worked with their longest-standing clients?)
What they offer clients who grow with them: priority production scheduling, dedicated development support, preferential pricing at scale
How they handle the transition from small brand to growing brand — do their systems and attention scale with you?
The vision question: "What does our relationship look like in three years if things go well?" A manufacturer who can answer this specifically — with concrete examples of how they have supported brand growth — is one who has thought about partnership, not just production.
How to Use This Framework
These ten questions are most effective when used as a structured evaluation tool across multiple supplier conversations. Score each manufacturer's responses on a consistent scale, and pay as much attention to how they answer as to what they answer.
The manufacturers who answer confidently, specifically, and with documentation to back up their claims are the ones worth pursuing. The ones who hedge, generalize, or promise to "follow up later" on basic questions are showing you their operating style before you have placed a single order.
A practical approach:
Send the questions in advance of your first call — a serious manufacturer will appreciate the preparation and come ready to answer
Request documentation for Questions 1, 3, and 9 before the meeting, not after
Follow up every verbal answer with a written summary — the response (or non-response) to that summary is itself informative
Run the reference check (Question 8) before finalizing your decision, not as a formality after
The Manufacturer Who Can Answer All Ten
We will be direct: not every cashmere manufacturer can answer all ten of these questions satisfactorily. Many can answer six or seven well. A few can answer eight or nine. The ones who can answer all ten — with documentation, with references, and with specific examples — represent a small subset of the global cashmere manufacturing landscape.
WFS Cashmere has built our business to be able to answer all ten. We hold OEKO-TEX, GOTS, BSCI, SEDEX/SMETA, WRAP, and ISO 9001 certifications. We produce 600,000+ pieces annually across 3GG–18GG. Our fiber is Grade A Inner Mongolian cashmere with micron documentation on every run. We have been building brand partnerships — not just processing orders — for over 20 years.
We are not the right manufacturer for every brand. But if you are a brand that takes supplier evaluation seriously, we are ready to answer every question on this list.
Request a Supplier Evaluation Call →
Download the Supplier Evaluation Checklist (PDF) →
Quick Reference: The 10 Questions at a Glance
# | Question | What It Reveals |
1 | What certifications do you hold? | Compliance maturity |
2 | What is your capacity and utilization? | Real availability for your orders |
3 | Where does your fiber come from? | Quality control discipline |
4 | What is your MOQ structure? | Who their real customer is |
5 | What does your development process look like? | Process maturity |
6 | How do you handle quality failures? | Real quality commitment |
7 | What is your actual lead time? | Planning reliability |
8 | Can you provide references? | Track record with real brands |
9 | What sustainability documentation can you provide? | Compliance readiness |
10 | What does a long-term partnership look like? | Partnership vs. transaction mindset |
WFS Cashmere Industry Co., Ltd.