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Platform updates

How We Think About Verified Suppliers on Paisán

2024-11-18 · 4 min read

"Verified" is one of the most overloaded words in B2B sourcing, so it is worth being precise about what it means on Paisán — and what it does not.

Our verification is built on signals we can actually observe. Four categories drive it: identity (the business is who it says it is, with verifiable registration), contactability (real people respond through real channels at reasonable speed), catalog depth (a product range consistent with genuine production capacity rather than a brokered storefront), and export-readiness cues (documentation habits, trade history, familiarity with the certifications their lane requires).

That last category matters more in Latin America than almost anywhere else, because the region's trade advantages are paperwork-gated. Preferential access under USMCA, CTPA, CAFTA-DR, and the U.S.–Peru TPA depends on rules-of-origin compliance that suppliers must actively support — and the 2025 tariff environment proved how much that support is worth, when USMCA utilization among Mexican exporters jumped from under half to nearly 89% within a year as duties made compliance valuable, per Mexico Business News. A supplier who cannot produce clean origin documentation is not export-ready, whatever their factory looks like.

Here is what a badge is not: a legal warranty. Verification reflects where a supplier stands in our observation process at a point in time. It is not a guarantee of product quality, contract performance, financial solvency, or regulatory compliance, and no platform badge anywhere should be read that way.

So we ask buyers to layer. Platform signals narrow the field; references, samples, and third-party checks close the deal. Order samples and grade the process, not just the product. Request buyer references and actually call them. For larger commitments, commission third-party factory audits and pre-shipment inspections — in markets where operational risks like cargo theft remain violent even as incident counts fall (roughly eight in ten Mexican cargo-theft cases in early 2026 involved violence, per Mexico's National Public Security System data), independent verification is not paranoia, it is procedure.

The takeaway

Our badges do the work badges can do: they tell you who is worth your diligence. The diligence is still yours.

Sources: Mexico Business News, Mexico National Public Security System (SESNSP).

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