Start by naming what changed since the last order

Laundry detergent reorders are often treated as repeat business, but a small change can turn the old file into the wrong file. The buyer may adjust fragrance direction, dosage wording, net content, color-care positioning, bottle size, cap route, private-label artwork or destination language.

Write those changes down before asking for a price repeat. If the new order keeps the same bottle but changes fragrance or front-label wording, the sample file, artwork file, carton mark and document names still need another look.

Use customer questions to check the label space

Common laundry detergent questions are practical: how much should I use, is this for colors, what fragrance is it, how should it be stored and what should not be mixed or misused. A retail label cannot answer every question, but it needs enough room for the buyer-approved directions and caution text.

Do not let a new claim push dosage or local-language wording into a corner. Product name, dosage note, use direction, caution or storage copy, net content, barcode, importer details, batch field and fragrance cue can crowd the same panel quickly.

Check the sample like a shopper will handle it

Put the real bottle beside fabric swatches, the dosing cap or cup, and the latest label proof. Hold the handle, open and close the cap, pour a small measured amount if the sample review allows it, and check whether the front label is still readable from a normal shelf angle.

This check is useful when a family-size bottle, new fragrance route or updated private-label design is planned. The product may look fine in a flat artwork file while the curved bottle and handle make the most useful wording harder to see.

Keep fragrance and dosage wording aligned across files

If the retail pack says color care with a coconut fragrance, the carton, order sheet and document folder should not use an older fragrance name or a short factory description that confuses the SKU. The same applies to dosage wording and bottle size.

Build a small reorder map: current product name, new retail name if different, formula or fragrance route, bottle size, cap route, net content, label language, barcode, carton quantity, carton mark and packing-list name. It is boring work, but it prevents avoidable receiving questions.

Recheck documents before bulk packing starts

Common laundry detergent files may include SDS or MSDS, COA where applicable, ingredient notes, label artwork, carton-mark approval, commercial invoice and packing list. The exact set depends on destination country, sales channel and buyer requirements.

When formula route, fragrance direction or label wording changes, ask whether the related files need an update too. It is safer to fix names and document references before printing cartons than after the goods are packed for shipment.

What to send Qiaoshou for a detergent reorder review

Send the previous SKU name, requested formula or fragrance route, bottle size, cap or dosage requirement, target market, sales channel, label language, artwork status, carton requirement, expected quantity and requested document list.

With that brief, Qiaoshou can review the detergent sample, label space, carton marks and common export documents together. The quotation then follows the retail pack the buyer plans to reorder, not just the old unit price.

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