China OEM Agreements - - Ten Things to Consider. Yesterday, our post of a slightly revised email on China’s employment law from Steve to one of our clients was a hit in that we received emails thanking us for having run it. So today, we are going to run another Steve to client email on an Original Equipment Manufacturing (OEM) agreement we drafted, first in English and then in Chinese. Here’s Steve’s email, slightly revised, setting forth some of the important considerations/issues when drafting China OEM agreements: We need to determine whether the agreement with your manufacturer will be exclusive or nonexclusive. It appears you want to give the Chinese Company an exclusive right to manufacture a certain subset of your products, with other Chinese companies having the right to manufacture other of your products. Please confirm my understanding is correct. We need to determine the Chinese Company’s obligation to sell.
There are basically two alternatives. Alternative One: The Chinese Company is obligated to produce product under any purchase order you submit and its failure to produce at the agreed price would be a default.
On the other hand, you would then be required to purchase a minimum amount of product during a specified time period. This approach is best if you want to guarantee supply and if you want to hold the Chinese Company to its commitment on price. Alternative Two: the Chinese Company is obligated to produce product only for those purchase orders it accepts. The Chinese Company has the right not to accept Purchase Orders, at its discretion. The advantage of this to you is that it will not require you to purchase any specific amount of product. The disadvantage is that there is no guarantee of supply and there is no way to hold the Chinese Company to any price commitment. The agreement as drafted provides for a specific port of delivery.
Original equipment manufacturer (OEM) agreements can help you conquer new markets and expand your business. But be sure you're asking the right questions before. Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) Agreements are structured for the sale of computer hardware systems and products using intermediaries (resellers). OEM Software License Agreement. Template; The latest version was saved by David Blanco Giró on 2007-09-07 17:41:33. Create a contract from this template.
However, if you will have multiple ports and delivery locations, we should revise the agreement to provide that the port/delivery location will be specified in the Purchase Orders and we will remove these references from the agreement itself. We have drafted the agreement to have the pricing system set out in a separate exhibit. For this exhibit, note that you will probably need to have separate pricing systems for domestic purchase and export product. Domestic product has different shipping and title transfer rules and is also influenced by the lack of any VAT rebate. Since you have no presence in China, we would also have to consider exactly how a non- export sale would work.
An OEM agreement refers to a contract between two companies where one of the parties agrees to supply parts or equipment to another so that the latter can. OEM Agreement and Other Business Contracts, Forms and Agreeements. Competitive Intelligence for Investors. Oem Agreement - This Manufacturing Agreement Involves Compex Technologies Inc, Bionicare Medical Technologies Inc. Oem Agreement - This Manufacturing Agreement Involves Crow Technologies 1977 Ltd, Freelink Ltd.
OEM Agreement Template – Download Now. Simply fill-in the blanks and print in minutes! Instant Access to 1,800+ business and legal forms. Download samples of. China OEM Agreements. Ten Things To Consider. By Dan Harris on April 22nd, 2010 Posted in Legal News. Yesterday, our post of a slightly revised email on China’s.
OEM LICENSE AND DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENT. “OEM Products. provided that such third parties have executed non-disclosure agreements with OEM with provisions.
Purchases by one of your allied trading companies may be the solution here. Section 3 of the Agreement provides for payment terms.
This approach is very favorable to you, since it provides for payment 3. If you will provide for payment 3. It is best to have inspection before payment, but this is not always practical. Note that we have not specified a warranty period.
The normal period is two years from date of shipment. One year from date of sale is not usually used, since there is no way for the Chinese Company to know when a sale is made. Two year warranties are common because the assumption is that the product will be sold sometime in the first year after shipment from China. In the trade secrets/IP protection provisions, we have provided for a monetary penalty for breach. It is customary to provide for $1.
The penalty is intended to be large enough to cause concern for the manufacturer, but not so large as to scare them away. The issues raised in this section come up all the time in China, so these provisions must be considered carefully.
The tooling provisions provide for a series of lump sum penalties. Tooling disputes are among the most common in manufacturing agreements and we have found these provisions effective in dealing with this issue.
Manufacturers commonly refuse to return tooling and the most effective way to control this is to provide for a significant lump sum penalty for such a refusal. This agreement is written to favor you but be fair. This agreement requires preparation of the following exhibits to provide for the variable and technical provisions of the manufacturing arrangement: List of products. Performance criteria (specifications)Product pricing method. Quality control and inspection procedure.
A customer no contact list. Tooling List. Purchase Order. We can assist with drafting these Exhibits as necessary.
It is customary NOT to translate these exhibits into Chinese.