EN April 21, 2026

How to Choose Between Direct Sourcing, Trading Houses and Agents in Turkey

SenTurGo Publié le April 21, 2026
Thumbnail - How to Choose Between Direct Sourcing, Trading Houses and Agents in Turkey

Direct vs Trading House vs Agent — The Choice That Shapes Your Margin

Every Senegalese importer buying from Turkey eventually faces the same fork: source directly from the factory, go through a Turkish trading house, or work through a commissioned agent. Each model changes your gross margin by 4-12 points, your lead time by 3-6 weeks, and your legal exposure on defects. This guide breaks down the three models with real cost structures, suitability by volume, and the decision rules used by experienced Dakar-based buyers.

Model 1: Direct Sourcing From Turkish Factory

How it works

You contract directly with the Turkish manufacturer, negotiate price FOB Izmir/Mersin, arrange your own freight, and take title of goods at the port of loading.

Strengths

  • Best possible price: zero intermediary margin (4–8% saved vs trading house)
  • Direct relationship for specs, quality feedback, product customization
  • Priority in factory order book once volume is established
  • Brand and label customization (OEM/private label) much easier

Weaknesses

  • Minimum Order Quantities (MOQ) often 1,000–5,000 units per SKU
  • All quality risk carried by you — mandatory third-party inspection via SGS/BV/QIMA (0.8% FOB)
  • Factory payment terms are tougher: 30% deposit + 70% against B/L copy
  • Language barrier: factories often negotiate in Turkish only below export department level
  • You need your own freight forwarder relationship (Bolloré/AGL, Kuehne+Nagel Istanbul)

Suitable for

  • Annual volume > USD 250,000 per supplier
  • Single SKU or narrow catalogue (textile, specific model of appliance)
  • Experienced importer with > 2 years on the corridor

Model 2: Turkish Trading House

How it works

A Turkish trading company (Alışveriş Merkezi İstanbul, multi-brand wholesalers in Laleli, Mahmutpaşa, or sector-specific traders at the Istanbul Textile Exporters Centre) aggregates products from multiple factories, consolidates into one container, and sells to you on CFR/CIF terms.

Strengths

  • One single counterparty for 5–20 different SKUs — ideal for multi-SKU orders
  • Lower MOQ per SKU (often 200–500 units)
  • Consolidation into single container saves 20–35% on freight vs multiple direct shipments
  • Trading house speaks English/French and manages QC internally
  • More flexible payment terms, sometimes 40% deposit + 60% before loading

Weaknesses

  • Intermediary margin 4–8% on top of factory FOB
  • Less visibility on actual factory — counterfeit / downgraded substitutions possible
  • Limited ability to customize product or packaging
  • Quality complaints routed through trading house: slower resolution

Suitable for

  • First-time importers, annual volume USD 30,000–250,000
  • Multi-SKU orders (groceries, fashion accessories, household mix)
  • Buyers without Turkish-speaking staff

Model 3: Commissioned Agent in Turkey

How it works

An independent agent in Turkey (often a former commercial attaché, freelance sourcer, or Senegalese diaspora entrepreneur in Istanbul) works on commission (typically 3–6% of FOB) and helps you find suppliers, negotiate, and manage logistics.

Strengths

  • Commission-only cost structure: you pay only on delivered containers
  • Agent works on your behalf, not for the factory — conflicts of interest lower than trading house
  • Helpful for sourcing rare or niche products
  • Can support trade fair visits, factory audits, sample collection
  • Good French/Wolof speakers in the Senegalese diaspora network in Istanbul (Mecidiyeköy, Kumkapı neighbourhoods)

Weaknesses

  • Agent quality varies widely — no formal regulation
  • Risk of “double commission” (taking from both supplier and buyer)
  • Limited liability on quality or delivery failures
  • You still need a Senegalese customs broker for Dakar clearance

Suitable for

  • Buyers visiting Turkey 1–2 times per year
  • Specialty or low-volume products
  • SMEs with flexible supplier switching strategy

Comparison Table

Dimension Direct Trading House Agent
Intermediary cost 0% 4–8% 3–6%
Minimum viable volume USD 250,000+ /yr USD 30,000+ /yr USD 20,000+ /yr
Lead time 45–60 days 50–70 days 55–75 days
Quality control burden You Trading house Shared
Payment terms 30/70 rigid 40/60 flexible Case by case
Language barrier High Low Low
Customization Full Limited Medium
Best for Volume, single SKU Multi-SKU FMCG Niche specialty

The Hybrid Model Most Experienced Dakar Importers Use

  1. Year 1: trading house (Laleli Istanbul) for multi-SKU test
  2. Year 2: identify 2–3 winning suppliers, switch those to direct sourcing
  3. Year 3+: maintain direct for top 5 suppliers, keep trading house for seasonal / smaller SKUs, hire commissioned agent for trade fair visits and new category exploration

Key Contacts To Start

  • TİM (Türkiye İhracatçılar Meclisi) at tim.org.tr — free supplier search by HS code
  • ihracat.gov.tr — official Turkish export portal
  • Laleli Sanayici ve İşadamları Derneği — trading house association, Laleli district, Istanbul
  • Turkish Senegalese Business Council (DEIK) — deik.org.tr — created 2015, vetted agents listing
  • SenTurGo platform — pre-qualified Turkey-Senegal trade directory

Red Flags in Any Model

  • Supplier requires 100% advance payment: NEVER accept
  • Trading house refuses factory name disclosure on commercial invoice: investigate
  • Agent asks for commission upfront before any order: walk away
  • Quality certificates that cannot be verified on TÜRKAK or TSE database: forgeries common

Bottom Line

No single sourcing model is optimal. Year 1: trading house to reduce risk. Year 2: identify winners, go direct for them. Year 3: hybrid portfolio with commissioned agents for discovery. Match the model to each SKU’s volume, complexity and strategic importance — that is how the top Dakar importers compound 30-40% gross margins while competitors fight at 15-20%.

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