Every company that succeeds abroad eventually says some version of the same thing: "We couldn't have done it without the right people on the ground." Every company that struggles abroad often says the opposite: "We picked the wrong partner and spent a year fixing it."
"International expansion partner" is a broad term, and that's exactly the problem — it can mean a distributor who moves your product, a joint-venture partner who co-invests with you, a local advisory firm who guides your market entry, or an Employer of Record who legally employs your first hires before you have a subsidiary. Each plays a different role, and each needs to be evaluated differently. At Expandys, we've spent 17 years helping companies work out not just what kind of partner they need at each stage of expansion, but how to tell a good one from a risky one before signing anything. This guide walks through both.
Companies often go looking for "a local partner" without being specific about the role that partner needs to play. That vagueness is what leads to mismatched expectations later. In practice, most international expansion partnerships fall into one of five categories:
Most companies need more than one of these at different points, and sometimes simultaneously. Naming the role clearly before you start searching is what makes the rest of this process work — a brilliant distributor evaluated against advisory-partner criteria (or vice versa) will look like the wrong fit even when they're exactly right for their actual role.
Whichever category you're evaluating, the same six qualification criteria apply. Weight them differently depending on the role, but never skip one entirely.
1. Track record in your specific sector and market A generalist with an impressive client list is not the same as a specialist who has actually worked with companies like yours. Ask for examples of work in your industry, not just in your target country, and ask what went wrong on at least one past engagement — how a partner discusses failure tells you more than how they discuss success.
2. Genuine local presence, not just a local address A registered office or a single local contact is not the same as an operating team on the ground. Ask how many people the partner has physically based in the market, how long they've been there, and whether they can name specific local relationships — regulators, banks, industry bodies — relevant to your sector.
3. Financial and organisational stability For commercial and JV partners especially, request recent financial information or a credit check. For advisory and professional services partners, ask how long the firm has operated and how much of their business depends on your account versus a broad, diversified client base — over-dependence on one relationship (in either direction) is a risk signal.
4. References you seek out yourself Ask for two or three references, but also look for others independently — through industry associations, LinkedIn connections, or your own network in the market. A partner confident in their work will not be uncomfortable with this.
5. Transparency on cost structure Understand exactly how the partner is paid — commission, retainer, margin, success fee — and what is and isn't included. Ambiguity here is one of the most common sources of disputes six months into a relationship.
6. Cultural and communication fit Responsiveness, directness, and working style during the qualification process itself are a preview of what the relationship will actually feel like day to day. A partner who is difficult to schedule or vague in early conversations rarely improves once the contract is signed.
Step 1 — Define the mandate precisely. Write down, in one paragraph, exactly what you need this partner to do, over what timeframe, and how you'll measure success. This becomes your qualification benchmark.
Step 2 — Build a long-list from multiple sources. Combine industry associations, trade bodies, chambers of commerce, existing supplier or competitor networks, and — where available — an established international network with vetted local firms already in place. A long-list built from a single source (a Google search, for instance) is rarely representative of the best options in a market.
Step 3 — Score candidates against the six criteria. Apply the same scorecard to every candidate so the comparison is objective rather than based on which meeting went best. This is especially important when comparing very different types of partner, such as a boutique local specialist against a large multinational firm.
Step 4 — Meet in person wherever possible. A video call tells you how someone presents. An in-person meeting — at their office, ideally — tells you how they actually operate. For commercial partners, this also means seeing warehouses, sales teams, or showrooms directly rather than relying on a deck.
Step 5 — Pilot before you commit long-term. Where the model allows it — a trial period with a distributor, a fixed-scope first engagement with an advisory partner, a short initial EOR contract — start smaller than you ultimately intend, and build in a genuine review point before extending or deepening the relationship.
Step 6 — Formalise the relationship clearly. Whatever the partner type, put expectations in writing: scope, deliverables or targets, payment terms, review cadence, and — critically — how either side can exit the relationship if it doesn't work. Local legal advice matters here, since termination rights for certain partner types (commercial agents, in particular) are protected by local law regardless of what the contract says.
This is, in effect, the exact question we ask our own clients to ask us. Expandys has operated for over 17 years, supporting more than 600 companies — from SMEs and start-ups to major groups, banks, and investment funds — across market entry, subsidiary set-up, HR and recruitment, accounting and tax compliance, and distribution partner sourcing. We maintain teams physically based in our core markets — the UK, India, and Australia — and extend that reach through Globallians, a network of independent, vetted consultancies covering more than 70 countries, so you're never relying on a single point of contact with no local depth behind them.
Concretely, that means:
Do we need a different partner for market entry than for ongoing operations? Often, yes. An advisory partner who helps validate a market and choose an entry mode plays a different role from the accountant, distributor, or EOR provider who supports ongoing operations. Some firms, like Expandys, cover both, which reduces handover risk between phases.
How many candidates should we realistically evaluate before choosing a partner? For most partner types, a shortlist of three to five thoroughly qualified candidates is enough to make a confident, comparable decision. Evaluating more than that usually adds time without adding meaningfully better options.
Is it better to use a partner recommended by our own network, or to search independently? Both have value, but a personal recommendation should still go through the same qualification process as any other candidate — a great fit for a contact's company is not automatically a great fit for yours.
What's the biggest single red flag when qualifying an international partner? Reluctance to provide verifiable references or clear cost structure. Both are simple, reasonable requests, and hesitation on either usually signals a bigger problem that will surface later.
Should the contract with an expansion partner always include an exit clause? Yes. Regardless of partner type, both sides should agree in advance on notice periods, termination grounds, and — where relevant — statutory protections in the local jurisdiction, before the relationship begins, not after a dispute has already started.
The right international expansion partner rarely announces itself in the first meeting. It's found through a deliberate process: naming exactly what role you need filled, applying consistent qualification criteria, meeting candidates in person, piloting before committing, and formalising the relationship clearly from day one. Get this process right, and a good partner becomes one of the most valuable assets in your expansion — often more valuable than capital itself.