Industrial catalogue / enquiry pattern

LF / catalogue study

Give the buyer a clearer starting point.

Lanka Forge is an illustrative website direction for a Sri Lankan B2B manufacturer or exporter. It puts product families, specification questions, packaging, and quotation context in view without claiming a real factory, range, certification, market, or supply commitment.

Every product name, capability, technical value, export term, and contact route shown in a live version must be confirmed by the actual business.

Illustrative industrial composition of geometric components on a technical grid; it is not a product photograph or evidence of manufacturing capability.
Original abstract product study created for this independent demo

Product-family discovery

Let a catalogue reveal the questions worth asking.

These deliberately neutral family cards give a future export site a structured first browse. They are interface examples only, not products, stock, materials, applications, or availability claims.

01 Illustrative family

Formed components

A compact entry point for parts, housings, or protective pieces where a buyer needs a clear route into an approved range.

Add client-approved material and drawing fields

View family pattern
02 Illustrative family

Barrier formats

A pattern for packaging, liners, wraps, or other protective formats that makes product variation feel orderly before a quotation discussion.

Add verified format and use information

View family pattern
03 Illustrative family

Precision profiles

A more technical catalogue doorway for profiles, sleeves, or assemblies where dimensions and end-use need client confirmation.

Add approved dimensions and tolerances

View family pattern

The labels above are illustrative. A live catalogue must replace them with client-approved product names, imagery, materials, uses, specifications, and availability information.

Neutral specification view

Useful detail, before unsupported detail.

A procurement-friendly table can show buyers which information a real product page will need without presenting invented technical data as a promise.

Illustrative specification matrix — values intentionally withheld until the client supplies and approves them.
Illustrative family Format to confirm Detail to confirm Packing detail to confirm
Formed components Drawing / size placeholder Surface or material placeholder Inner / outer pack placeholder
Barrier formats Width / gauge placeholder Seal or print placeholder Roll / carton placeholder
Precision profiles Section / length placeholder Colour or treatment placeholder Bundle / pallet placeholder

Do not publish dimensions, tolerances, material grades, safety information, pack counts, lead times, MOQ, prices, certificates, or shipping terms until the real business has verified each value for the relevant product and destination.

Industry contexts

Organise the conversation by what the buyer is solving.

Use sector pathways to help a visitor find the right enquiry without implying that the business serves a named industry, client, market, or application.

01

Consumer goods

A content slot for approved product protection, presentation, or component requirements.

Illustrative context only

02

Food & beverage

A content slot for verified packaging or component conversations, with applicable compliance information supplied by the client.

No food-safety claim implied

03

Industrial supply

A content slot for approved procurement needs, drawings, quantities, and specification review.

Buyer requirement first

04

Distribution partners

A content slot for a client-approved distributor or sourcing conversation—never a promise of territory, exclusivity, or supply.

Terms require client approval

Industry cards describe a website structure, not a customer list, sector credential, compliance status, or operating capability.

Capability rhythm

Make the RFQ path feel deliberate.

A real manufacturer can replace this staged pattern with its approved commercial and technical process. The demo does not state that Lanka Forge performs any step.

  1. 01 BRIEF

    Frame the requirement

    Give the buyer a place to name the product family, intended use, quantity, and destination without submitting information through this demo.

  2. 02 VERIFY

    Check the details

    Surface the need for drawings, dimensions, packaging, compliance, sample, or artwork information before a real client responds.

  3. 03 CONFIRM

    Agree the commercial context

    Leave MOQ, lead time, Incoterms, price, payment, and shipping for the actual business to confirm for the specific enquiry.

  4. 04 RESPOND

    Keep the next step human

    Use a named enquiry route only after the client approves its response process and buyer-contact handling.

This is a communication pattern, not a promise of sampling, production, testing, packaging, delivery, export, quotation, or response time.

RFQ preparation desk

Show what a complete enquiry usually needs.

Instead of a non-functional form, this is a short checklist a live exporter can tailor. It creates a more informed WhatsApp conversation about the design without collecting buyer data here.

Product or family
Client-approved catalogue item
Replace with an approved product name or code
Specification
Drawing / sample / dimensions
Confirm which files and units the business accepts
Quantity & MOQ
To be confirmed
Do not display a MOQ until the business has approved it
Packaging
Inner / outer pack to confirm
Use only the verified packaging options
Destination & shipping
Destination / Incoterms to confirm
Terms and routes require business confirmation

This page does not submit an RFQ, request a sample, download a brochure, or collect specifications. It is a design demo only.

Request-for-quotation CTA

Ready to make this export catalogue your own?

Web Blitz can adapt this direction around the real product range and approved sales process. The button opens a prefilled WhatsApp message about choosing this design—not a manufacturer RFQ or a supply request.

Ask Web Blitz about this design

Opens a prefilled WhatsApp message. It does not create an RFQ, confirm production, reserve stock, request samples, or agree export terms.

  1. Client-approved product families
  2. Verified specification and packaging fields
  3. Approved MOQ, sample, and commercial terms
  4. Confirmed enquiry and buyer-response process

Lanka Forge

A distinct independent demo for B2B manufacturing and exporter websites: industrial hierarchy, specification-ready moments, and a disciplined RFQ path without invented proof points.

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