Cursos en línea: Aprendiendo sobre la cadena de suministro

A buyer in Germany just lost $47,000 last Tuesday.

She took three online courses. Paid for two certifications. Even got a LinkedIn badge that said “Supply Chain Expert.”

Then she wired a deposit to a factory she found on Alibaba.

Desaparecido.

The factory’s business license? Photoshopped. The address? A bubble tea shop. The “factory tour video”? Stock footage with a voiceover.

Here’s the thing about online courses: they teach you theory. They don’t teach you how to spot a con artist in a Shenzhen industrial park at 9 PM when the real workers clock out and the “show crew” clocks in.

I’ve been doing this for six years. I’ve seen buyers with MBAs get scammed. I’ve seen dropshippers with YouTube channels lose their shirts. And I’ve seen people with zero formal education build million-dollar import businesses because they learned the one skill no course teaches:

How to smell bullshit from 10 meters away.

What They Don’t Tell You in Class

Most supply chain courses are built by people who haven’t set foot in a Chinese factory since 2015. Or ever.

They teach you about “Lean Manufacturing” and “Six Sigma” and “Just-in-Time Inventory.”

Cool.

Now explain why your factory just told you they can’t ship because it’s Tomb Sweeping Festival and half the workers went back to their village.

Or why your “ISO-certified” supplier is using recycled cardboard that dissolves in humidity.

Or why the sample you approved had German components but the bulk order has Chinese knock-offs.

You won’t find that in Module 7 of your Coursera certificate.

The Supplier’s Phrasebook

Let me save you twelve weeks of lectures. Here’s what factories actually mean when they talk to you:

Lo que dicen

Lo que significan

“We are a professional factory”

We have a WeChat account and a cousin with a workshop

“No hay problema, podemos hacerlo”

We have no idea, but we’ll figure it out using your money

“The sample is ready”

We bought it from your competitor and scraped off their logo

“El plazo de entrega es de 15 días”

45 days if you’re lucky, 90 if we’re honest

“We work with many Fortune 500 companies”

We made keychains for a guy who said he worked at Google

“Tasa de defectos baja, muy normal”

30% of your order is garbage but we already spent your deposit

“You can visit our factory anytime”

Please give us 48 hours to rent a clean factory for your visit

This table is worth more than a $2,000 supply chain course.

Print it. Tape it to your monitor.

El método del cigarrillo

Want to know the real quality of a factory?

Don’t ask the boss. Don’t ask the sales manager.

Go outside during lunch break. Find a worker having a smoke. Offer them a cigarette.

Ask them how long they’ve worked there. Ask them if they get paid on time. Ask them what they think of the new production line.

They’ll tell you everything.

I learned this trick from a guy who imports furniture. He was touring a factory that looked perfect. Shiny machines. Clean floors. Quality certificates on the wall.

Then he stepped out for a smoke.

A worker told him the machines only run when buyers visit. The rest of the time, they use old equipment in a building next door.

He walked away from a $200,000 order.

That’s the kind of thing you learn in the field, not in a webinar.

This is why our sourcing service doesn’t just send you factory names from a database. We go there. We smoke with the workers. We check the scrap bins. We look at the bathroom. Because a factory that can’t keep a toilet clean sure as hell can’t keep your production line clean.

Banderas rojas que gritan “¡Corre!”

Here’s your checklist. If you see any of these, pull your money immediately:

  • The factory asks for 100% payment upfront. (Even 50% is sketchy unless you’ve worked together before.)

  • They refuse a third-party inspection. Any excuse. Any reason. Walk.

  • The business license has a different name than the company you’re talking to.

  • Their “factory video” has no date, no signs, no workers’ faces.

  • They can’t do a video call. “Camera broken” or “boss is traveling” for three weeks straight.

  • The sales rep speaks perfect English but can’t answer a single technical question.

  • They offer a price 40% lower than everyone else with “same quality.”

  • Their email domain is @gmail or @yahoo. (Seriously?)

  • The sample arrives in 3 days but the bulk order takes 60 days. (The sample came from Taobao.)

  • They get angry or “offended” when you ask for proof of certifications.

  • The payment goes to a personal bank account, not a company account.

  • They suddenly need extra money for “mold fees” or “raw material increases” after you’ve paid the deposit.

I’m not exaggerating.

A guy I know ignored half this list because the supplier was “so nice” and “very cooperative.”

He lost $80,000 on an order of Bluetooth speakers that caught fire during charging.

The supplier? Vanished. New phone number. New email. New company name.

Same scam, different victim.

What You Actually Need to Learn

Forget the fancy terminology.

Here’s what separates amateurs from pros:

Condiciones de pago. Never pay 100% upfront. Standard is 30% deposit, 70% before shipping. If you’re new, use a letter of credit or escrow. Yes, it costs more. So does losing your entire investment.

Quality control. Hire someone to inspect the goods before they ship. Not the factory’s “in-house QC.” Not your supplier’s cousin. A real third-party inspector who doesn’t care about keeping the factory happy.

Nuestro QC service has stopped more disasters than I can count. Last month, we caught a factory trying to ship 5,000 phone cases with the wrong logo. The buyer would’ve been out $30,000 in returns and lost sales. We caught it for $200.

Contracts. A one-page contract in broken English is not a contract. It’s a joke. You need penalty clauses for late delivery. You need clear specs for defects. You need an agreement on who pays for what if things go wrong.

Logistics. The factory gives you an FOB price. Great. Now add freight, customs, duties, port fees, trucking, warehousing, and the guy who has to unload the container at 6 AM.

That $5 product? It’s now $11 landed in your warehouse.

Nobody teaches you that in a YouTube video.

Nuestro logistics service handles this nightmare so you don’t wake up to a surprise $4,000 demurrage fee because your container sat at the port too long.

The Real Education

I’m not saying online courses are useless.

If you need to understand the basics of incoterms or how a bill of lading works, sure, take a course.

But if you think a certificate is going to save you from a crooked factory, you’re going to learn a very expensive lesson.

The best education is mistakes.

The second-best education is learning from someone else’s mistakes.

I’ve made plenty. I’ve been lied to, scammed, and cheated. I’ve had factories disappear, shipments delayed, and products that looked nothing like the sample.

And I’ve learned.

Now I help people avoid the same traps. Not through theory. Through war stories.

Through showing them the recycled plastic that a “premium” supplier tried to pass off as virgin material.

Through walking them past the “showroom factory” to the real production site two blocks away where the floors are sticky and the air smells like burning solder.

Through teaching them to check the business license, verify the bank account, and demand a video call before wiring a single dollar.

Tu movimiento

Go check your supplier’s business license right now.

Not later. Now.

Ask them to send you a photo of their current license with today’s newspaper in the frame.

If they hesitate, if they make excuses, if they get weird about it—you have your answer.

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