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Pre-Shipment Photo Approval Buyer Route Before Balance Payment
A factory can send a large photo pack and still avoid showing the exact points that matter before balance payment is released.
The buyer should confirm five things clearly:
- which cartons, SKUs, and quantities the photos actually represent
- whether the photo set shows labels, marks, and visible finish at shipment level
- what defect-prone points still need close evidence instead of wide-angle reassurance
- whether the photos match the approved sample or latest correction standard
- what payment remains blocked until the photo proof is commercially good enough
The short answer
Before balance payment, treat pre-shipment photo approval as a payment-control gate. Match the photos to the real shipment, the approved standard, the visible risk points, and the release condition before money is sent.
Pre-shipment photo approval checklist
- Scope match: Confirm the photos represent the actual shipment quantity, carton count, SKU mix, and final packed condition instead of a partial or earlier batch.
- Visible-risk coverage: Require close evidence of the finish, labels, accessories, marks, and any defect-prone point that has already caused concern in sampling or inspection.
- Sample-to-shipment continuity: Compare the current photo set against the approved sample, corrected defect standard, or latest accepted revision before approving release.
- Proof quality: Reject photos that are too distant, selective, compressed, or incomplete to support a real release decision.
- Payment leverage: Keep balance payment blocked until the photo approval is good enough to support the same standard the buyer expects at arrival.
Where photo approval usually fails before balance payment
The supplier sends general photos, the buyer sees that the goods look mostly finished, and balance payment moves before the unresolved details are isolated. That removes leverage too early. Photo approval should tighten payment control, not soften it.
What Wynn should receive on WhatsApp before photo-approval review
- the product line, market, and order quantity
- the approved sample or correction baseline
- the current pre-shipment photos or video set
- the balance-payment deadline
- the blocked issue around visible defects, marks, or proof quality