1. Many cosmetic packaging RFQs fail long before sampling starts. The document may include a reference image, a target color, and a rough component idea, yet still produce quotations that are difficult to compare or difficult to trust. In color cosmetics, that usually happens because the RFQ describes what the brand wants to see, but not what the factory needs to know in order to quote the work correctly.
2. At KAIYA, RFQ quality is treated as an execution issue, not an admin step. A better RFQ does not only improve quotation speed. It improves supplier comparison, reduces sample loops, and lowers the chance that a project looks affordable in the quotation stage and becomes unstable later. That is especially important when one launch includes more than one structure family and the brand is trying to compare tubes, compacts, sticks, bottles, jars, or palettes under one program.
3. The biggest mistake is assuming one general request can cover every structure equally well. An RFQ for cosmetic tube packaging should not be written with the same assumptions used for a cosmetic compact case or cosmetic stick packaging route. The quotation logic changes because the risk points change. A tube program may be more sensitive to decoration route and filling rhythm, while a compact or stick program may be more sensitive to hinge behavior, cap fit, mechanism tolerance, or assembly complexity.

1. Start the RFQ With Product Role, Not With Decoration Mood
A factory can quote more accurately when it understands the product's commercial role. Is the SKU a hero launch item, a supporting item in a wider collection, a seasonal add-on, or a low-risk extension that should stay close to standard structure? Those differences affect how the factory thinks about finish depth, process control, development risk, and acceptable production tolerance.
This is one reason many brand-side RFQs create confusion. They begin with surface language such as “premium,” “clean,” or “playful,” but do not explain whether the package needs to behave like a main shelf anchor or a simpler support SKU. In practice, the same decorative idea can lead to very different quotation logic depending on how important the product is inside the assortment.
KAIYA usually recommends writing the first RFQ section around role definition: category, line role, intended channel, launch timing, and expected reorder logic. That gives the supplier a commercial frame before the structural details begin.

2. Define the Structure Family and Use Behavior Explicitly
“Custom packaging needed” is not enough. The RFQ should clearly state the structure family and the intended interaction pattern. Does the product need squeeze control, direct face application, one-hand touch-up, mirror-assisted use, or more treatment-led access? Those details help the factory understand not only what type of pack is needed, but what type of performance standard the brand is actually buying.
This is where many quotation gaps begin. If a compact is requested without saying whether it is cushion-led, powder-led, or refill-oriented, suppliers may quote visually similar structures that behave very differently. If a stick is requested without explaining whether it is meant for foundation, blush, or highlight, suppliers may quote routes with the wrong cap pressure, wrong shell authority, or wrong mechanism expectations.
KAIYA often advises brands to phrase this section in behavioral terms. Instead of writing only “lip product tube” or “face compact,” explain how the user is expected to handle it, how often it may be reopened, whether portability matters heavily, and whether the product needs to feel premium, simple, fast, or gift-oriented. Those are quotation-relevant inputs, not just marketing inputs.

3. Separate Non-Negotiable Requirements From Negotiable Ones
A good RFQ does not treat every request as equally important. Factories need to know which conditions are fixed and which ones are preference-led. Non-negotiable items may include component type, size range, key fit expectations, closure requirements, material direction, or decoration boundaries that the brand cannot move away from. Negotiable items may include optional finishes, variant ideas, accessory add-ons, or secondary aesthetic upgrades that can be phased later.
Without this separation, suppliers often quote either too conservatively or too optimistically. Some will assume every detail is mandatory and build in cost buffers. Others will assume several points are flexible and quote too loosely. In both cases, comparison becomes harder because the quotations are not based on the same level of commitment.
KAIYA usually recommends one RFQ section titled “must-have requirements” and another titled “optional or phase-two ideas.” This sounds simple, but it dramatically improves quote quality because factories stop guessing where the brand is willing to compromise.
4. Finish Direction Must Be Defined Early Enough to Affect the Quote
Finish planning should not be added after supplier comparison has already started. If the decoration route is vague, quotations may look comparable on paper while hiding completely different feasibility assumptions. A shell that requires basic printing, one that requires hot stamping, and one that requires a more layered finish route are not the same quotation problem.
That is why KAIYA usually recommends naming the baseline finish route in the RFQ and then listing acceptable alternatives. The document does not need to lock every decorative detail immediately, but it should give the factory enough direction to quote a realistic process path. This is where alignment with complete surface treatment solutions becomes useful, because the quote should reflect the actual process family the brand is likely to use rather than a generic cosmetic-shell estimate.
A practical RFQ often works better when it asks suppliers to comment on finish risk as well. In other words: not only “can you do this,” but “what part of this finish route is most likely to create drift, delay, or yield loss?” That answer is often more valuable than the base price itself.

5. Quantity Should Be Written in Three Layers, Not One
Many RFQs only give one quantity number, and that is usually not enough. A more useful document separates first order, expected reorder range, and possible SKU expansion window. A factory may quote one route aggressively at a low first order quantity even though it becomes inefficient or unstable once the project expands. Another route may look more expensive at launch but become stronger once the line scales.
KAIYA therefore recommends defining quantity in layers: the launch quantity the team is budgeting immediately, the likely reorder range if the SKU performs, and the possible category expansion if the structure becomes a repeat platform. That helps factories quote with a more realistic view of tooling, material planning, and production rhythm.
This is especially important in color cosmetics, where one structure often becomes a family. A single lipstick, gloss, compact, or stick shell may later support several shades, finishes, or sub-lines. If the RFQ ignores that possibility, the brand may receive a quote that looks attractive only because it is built around a very narrow short-term assumption.

6. Ask for a Risk List, Not Only a Price List
One of the most useful RFQ upgrades is asking each supplier to return a short risk matrix together with the quotation. That matrix should identify tolerance-sensitive points, likely failure modes, process-sensitive decoration steps, and any part of the request that may require trade-offs. A polished quote without a risk list often hides weak execution thinking.
This is how real supplier comparison becomes sharper. Two suppliers may quote similar pricing, but one may identify the actual risk layers much earlier. In many B2B projects, that supplier is the safer long-term partner even if the first quotation is not the absolute cheapest.
KAIYA treats this as a normal part of RFQ review because a packaging supplier should not only confirm that a component can be produced. They should also show where the project is most likely to slow down, drift visually, or require revalidation later.

7. Add Approval and Change-Control Rules Before Sampling Starts
A strong RFQ should explain what happens after the first quote is accepted. Which sample checkpoints will the brand use? Which changes trigger requote, resampling, or revalidation? Which changes are cosmetic, and which ones are structural enough to reopen the project logic? Without these rules, development often drifts into repeated revisions that look minor one by one but collectively damage speed and budget.
KAIYA usually recommends defining this in plain operational language. If a material changes, does the price reopen? If a finish stack changes, is revalidation required? If the cap fit target changes, does the pilot need to restart? The clearer these boundaries are, the easier it becomes to protect both timeline and quotation discipline.
8. Final Recommendation
A good RFQ is not the longest document. It is the one that gives the factory enough commercial, structural, finish, and quantity context to quote the project honestly. In color cosmetic packaging, that usually means the RFQ must define product role, structure behavior, requirement priority, finish path, quantity layers, risk expectations, and approval rules before supplier comparison goes too far.
KAIYA supports brands by turning broad packaging ideas into execution-ready RFQ structures. The practical goal is simple: more comparable quotations, fewer sample misunderstandings, and better stability from first development through mass production.



