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How to Find Wholesale Distributors for Your Product

How to find wholesale distributors for your product: a step-by-step guide to the channels that work (trade shows, industry directories, B2B marketplaces, trade associations, referrals, and cold outreach), plus how to evaluate and onboard the right partner.

Published ·Hell of a Partner Team

Key takeaways

  • Define an Ideal Distributor Profile (categories, channels, geography, scale, licences) before you contact anyone.
  • The proven channels are industry trade shows, B2B marketplaces and industry directories, trade associations and chambers of commerce, referrals from existing partners, and targeted cold outreach.
  • Evaluate candidates on market coverage, category experience, financial stability, certifications, and dedicated headcount, not on size alone.
  • Start with a non-exclusive pilot and clear sales minimums before granting any exclusive territory rights.

How to Find Wholesale Distributors for Your Product

To find wholesale distributors for your product, define the kind of partner you need, then reach them through five proven channels: industry trade shows, B2B marketplaces and industry directories, trade associations and chambers of commerce, referrals from companies you already work with, and targeted cold outreach to commercial directors. Shortlist candidates against a written Ideal Distributor Profile, check their market coverage and references, and start with a non-exclusive pilot before granting exclusivity. The sections below explain each channel, how to qualify a distributor, and the mistakes that cost manufacturers the most time and money.

Why Distribution Matters for Manufacturers

Building a great product is only half the battle. Getting that product in front of buyers across new geographies requires a network of partners who know local markets, speak the language, hold the regulatory licences, and have existing customer relationships. A well-chosen distributor can compress years of market-building into months. The wrong one can burn your brand equity and lock you into exclusivity clauses that block better opportunities. For most manufacturers, especially those without a dedicated export sales team, distribution partnerships are the primary engine of international growth. Understanding how to find, qualify, and onboard the right partner is therefore one of the highest-leverage skills a manufacturer can develop.

Types of B2B Distribution Partners

Not all distribution partners work the same way. Before you start searching, it helps to understand the four main types: Importers specialise in cross-border trade. They handle customs clearance, import duties, and regulatory compliance. Many also take title to the goods, so they carry inventory risk. An importer is often your first point of entry into a new country. Wholesalers buy in volume from manufacturers or importers and sell on to retailers, institutional buyers, or end customers. They compete on margin efficiency and logistics coverage rather than brand-building. Sales agents work on commission and never take title to your goods. They pitch your products to buyers, pass orders back to you, and earn a percentage of each sale. Because they carry no inventory risk, they are cheaper to onboard, but their loyalty is divided across multiple manufacturers they represent. Master distributors hold exclusive rights for a territory and often manage a sub-distributor network beneath them. They offer deep market penetration but require careful contract negotiation around minimum purchase commitments, pricing floors, and exit clauses. For a detailed comparison of these partner types, see our article on distributors, importers, wholesalers and agents.

How to Define Your Ideal Distributor Profile

Before you contact anyone, write a one-page Ideal Distributor Profile (IDP). This is a sales document for yourself, it forces clarity and prevents you wasting time on partners who are structurally wrong for your product. Your IDP should answer: What categories does the ideal partner already sell? Which channels (retail, foodservice, e-commerce, B2B)? What geography do they cover, national, regional, city-level? What annual turnover indicates they have enough scale? Do they need a warehousing operation, a cold chain, or specialist equipment? Are there regulatory licences (food safety, medical device, electrical safety) that a partner must already hold? The more specific your IDP, the faster you can screen candidates. A distributor who ticks nine out of ten criteria is a warm lead; one who ticks four is a time sink.

Where to Find Distributors: 5 Proven Methods

1. Industry trade shows. Sector-specific events like Anuga (food), Medica (medical devices), Automechanika (automotive), or Ambiente (consumer goods) attract distributors actively looking for new product lines. Walk the floor, collect business cards, and follow up within 48 hours while your conversation is fresh. 2. B2B marketplaces and industry directories. A B2B marketplace lets you filter distributors, importers, and agents by country, sector, and partner type, then contact them directly. Hell of a Partner is one such option: a B2B marketplace that connects manufacturers with distributors, where you can browse partner profiles by category and geography. This approach is faster than trade shows and scales well, you can screen many candidates in an afternoon. Sector-specific online directories published by trade bodies serve a similar purpose. 3. Trade associations and chambers of commerce. Most sectors have national or international trade bodies that maintain member directories. The Federation of International Trade Associations, your country's export promotion agency (for example Germany Trade & Invest, the UK's Department for Business and Trade, or the US Commercial Service), and bilateral chambers of commerce are all worth contacting. 4. Referrals and networking. Your existing partners are often the fastest route to a good distributor. Ask non-competing manufacturers, your freight forwarders, your customers, and your importers who they rate in a target market. A warm introduction converts far better than a cold approach and comes with an implicit reference. 5. Targeted cold outreach. If you know the company but cannot reach them through the channels above, a short, direct LinkedIn message or email to the commercial director often works. Name your product category and the geography you are targeting in the subject line, keep it to about five sentences, and include one specific reason their network is a good fit.

How to Evaluate a Distributor Candidate

Once you have a list of candidates, apply a consistent scoring process before any serious negotiation. Market coverage. Does the distributor cover the specific regions, cities, or retail chains that matter for your product? Ask for a map of their coverage and a list of key accounts. Category experience. Have they successfully launched comparable products before? Ask for two or three reference cases, not testimonials, but actual examples with numbers. A distributor who can say "we took Brand X from zero to €2m in three years in France" is more credible than one who says they can "open any door." Sales channels. If your product belongs on pharmacy shelves, a distributor whose strength is foodservice is a poor fit even if they operate in the right country. Financial stability. A distributor who cannot fund a meaningful opening order or who consistently pays suppliers late is a risk. Request trade references and, where available, run a credit check. Certifications and regulatory licences. For food, medical, electrical, or chemical products, make sure the distributor holds the import and handling licences required in their market. Verify these directly with the issuing authority, not just from a document the distributor sends you. Team size and dedicated headcount. A distributor who will assign one part-time person to your brand across fifty other manufacturers is unlikely to move the needle. Ask specifically: who on their team will own your account, and what percentage of their time will they commit?

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Signing exclusivity too early. Never grant exclusive territory rights before you have seen 12 months of actual performance data. Start with a non-exclusive pilot or a short exclusive with clearly defined sales minimums and a break clause. Choosing the largest partner available. The biggest distributor in a market often takes on new brands to block competitors, not to grow them. A mid-tier distributor who is hungry for a breakthrough line may deliver better results. Skipping reference calls. Always call at least two manufacturers who currently work with the distributor. Ask specifically: Did they hit their sales targets? How responsive is their team? How do they handle pricing disputes? Would you sign with them again? Neglecting ongoing support. A distributor is not a set-it-and-forget-it channel. Plan for quarterly business reviews, regular training for their sales team, co-funded marketing, and a clear escalation path for operational issues. Ignoring termination clauses. Even when a relationship starts well, markets change. Make sure your contract has a clear notice period, a process for handling remaining stock, and protections for your brand materials and customer data.

Next Steps

The fastest way to move from research to real conversations is to use a platform where verified distribution partners have already provided structured information about their categories, coverage, and capabilities. Browse the distributor catalog on Hell of a Partner to find partners by country, sector, and partner type. Each profile shows the distributor's stated market coverage, product categories, and trade experience, so you can filter and shortlist before you send a single message. If you are still deciding what type of partner you need, read our breakdown of distributor types. If Europe is your target market, our guide to finding distributors in Europe covers key markets and regulatory considerations in detail.

Frequently asked questions

What is the fastest way to find wholesale distributors for my product?

A B2B marketplace or industry directory is usually the fastest way, because partners are already listed with their category focus, geographic coverage, and partner type, so you can filter and shortlist in an afternoon rather than waiting for the next trade show. Combine it with referrals from companies you already work with for warm introductions.

How do I find distributors for a new product with no track record?

Lead with the market opportunity rather than past sales. Write a one-page Ideal Distributor Profile, approach mid-tier distributors who are hungry for a breakthrough line, and offer a non-exclusive pilot with clear sales targets so the partner can test demand at low risk. Trade associations and B2B marketplaces are good starting points when you have no existing network.

How much margin do wholesale distributors take?

It varies by sector, but a buy-sell distributor that warehouses your product and sells it on typically buys at roughly 40 to 60 percent below your list price to fund their logistics, sales, and margin. Sales agents who never take title usually work on a commission of around 5 to 15 percent instead.

Should I give a distributor exclusive rights to my product?

Not at the start. Grant exclusivity only after you have seen about 12 months of real performance data. Begin with a non-exclusive pilot, or a short exclusive with defined sales minimums and a break clause, so you can exit if the partner underperforms.

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