Core

Shop Directory

The shop directory helps buyers narrow the field by capability, material, process, and project fit instead of relying on a broad search result.

A better shortlist makes quotes easier to compare and reduces wasted outreach to suppliers that were never the right match.

fabricator directoryfind a metal fabricatormetal fabrication company directory
Shop Directory planning scene with drawings, parts, and fabrication context.
Core Insight

A directory built to help you narrow the field with more confidence

The shop directory is designed for buyers who need more than a random list of fabricators. It helps you think in terms of process fit, material focus, industry alignment, and supplier type so the shortlist reflects the actual project instead of a broad search result.

A better shortlist makes every step after it easier. Quotes become more comparable, file handoffs become cleaner, and supplier conversations start with more relevant context.

Detailed view related to shop directory in a fabrication setting.
What to Review

Key decision points

The strongest fabrication decisions come from understanding the trade-offs before pricing and production pressure take over.

Search by capability

Use process, material, and project-type thinking to narrow the supplier list before sending files.

Support better comparison

A structured shortlist makes it easier to compare suppliers on the same scope and expectations.

Connect directory and guidance

Each supplier review should be supported by the tools and support pages that make your RFQ stronger.

Next Steps

How to use the shop directory well

Use the sequence below to turn the guidance on this page into a cleaner RFQ, a better shortlist, or a more practical project plan.

1

Define the job before you search

Start with the process, material, volume, finish, and timeline that matter most.

2

Group suppliers by real fit

Separate general-purpose shops from process specialists and repeat-production partners.

3

Send the same package to the right shortlist

The most useful comparison happens when the scope is clear and the supplier list is relevant.

Common Questions

Questions about the directory

Use these short answers to remove common friction before you move into supplier selection, quote preparation, or project release.

How should I narrow the supplier list?

Use the actual project constraints such as process, material, part type, volume, finish, and delivery expectations instead of a generic search term alone.

Should I contact many shops at once?

A smaller, better-fit shortlist usually produces stronger quote conversations than a long list of loosely matched suppliers.

What should I do before sending files to a directory shortlist?

Tighten the RFQ package so every supplier is looking at the same revision, scope, and priorities.

Ready When You Are

Need help getting the project ready before you shortlist shops?

Review the RFQ checklist and CAD file guidance, then use Request a Quote when the package is ready.

Project-ready details help every next step

When the files, quantities, materials, finish notes, and priorities are organized before outreach begins, suppliers can respond with fewer assumptions and better direction.

You can also review the linked pages above to tighten the package before it goes out.