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Sample Rework Approval Buyer Route Before The Second Round
The second sample round should close uncertainty, not hide it.
Before approving sample rework, the buyer should isolate:
- which defects or gaps the new sample must fix
- which files or specs changed
- what the supplier promises to keep unchanged
- what timing is still acceptable
- what would still block bulk approval after the second round
The short answer
Before approving a second-round sample rework, define the exact rework list, the unchanged baseline, the new timing, and the release gate that decides whether bulk approval is now possible.
Sample rework approval checklist
- Rework scope: list the exact visible, dimensional, functional, or packaging issues the second sample must correct.
- Baseline freeze: clarify which parts of the first sample remain approved so the supplier does not reopen good areas while fixing weak ones.
- File and version control: match the new round to the right BOM, artwork, color note, charger route, backing route, or label file.
- Timing cost: confirm the new sample schedule and whether the project can still tolerate another loop if the rework is incomplete.
- Bulk-release rule: decide what the second sample must prove before the buyer can move to production approval.
Where second-round samples usually drift
The buyer says, “Please improve these points,” and the supplier interprets that loosely. Then the second sample fixes two issues, changes another approved area, and still leaves no clear release standard. Rework rounds need tighter scope than first samples, not looser scope.
What Wynn should receive on WhatsApp before sample rework review
- photos or notes from the first sample
- the exact rework list
- the current file or BOM version
- the timing pressure on the project
- the blocked issue around scope, change control, or production release