CTQ (Critical to Quality) in Phone Inspection

What CTQ characteristics mean in quality control for wholesale phones — defining critical, major, and minor defects for pre-shipment inspection.

Quick Answer ctq

CTQ defects in phone quality control are classified as Critical (device non-functional or unsafe — zero tolerance per lot), Major (significantly reduces usability — controls AQL pass/fail threshold), and Minor (cosmetic only — tracked but not grounds for rejection). A cracked screen is typically a major defect; a scratched back panel is minor; a non-functional cellular radio is critical. Defect classifications should be documented in the purchase order.

What CTQ Means in Wholesale Phone Quality Control

CTQ — Critical to Quality — is a Six Sigma concept that identifies the specific, measurable characteristics a product must have to be acceptable to the customer. In the wholesale phone trade, CTQ translates directly into your inspection checksheet: the written list of attributes your shipment must pass before it leaves a supplier’s warehouse in Shenzhen, Guangzhou, or Hong Kong.

The core principle is simple. Not every defect costs you the same. A phone that will not power on destroys the sale entirely. A faint hairline scratch on the bezel might be acceptable in Grade B stock. CTQ frameworks force you to rank these characteristics before you inspect — not after a dispute has started.

Without a written CTQ spec, inspection companies have no objective pass/fail threshold. Without a threshold, every dispute becomes an argument about what “good condition” means. With a CTQ spec, it becomes a factual count against agreed criteria.

Six Sigma Origins and Why They Transfer Directly to Phones

Six Sigma, developed at Motorola and codified in manufacturing through the 1990s, uses CTQ to translate customer requirements (“the phone must work”) into measurable inspection parameters (“powers on within 10 seconds, all buttons functional, baseband unlocked”). The Voice of the Customer (VOC) becomes a tree: customer need → quality driver → CTQ characteristic.

For a wholesale phone buyer, the VOC is commercial, not sentimental. Your customers — repair shops, resellers, exporters — need units that function as described, grade-accurately cosmetically, and carry no liability (blacklisted IMEI, locked carrier). CTQ converts those commercial requirements into checkable criteria.

CTQ Characteristics for Wholesale Phones

Inspection companies working the HK/Shenzhen corridor categorise CTQ criteria into three tiers aligned with defect severity:

Must-Have: Critical CTQs

Failure on any Critical CTQ means automatic rejection of the unit regardless of cosmetic grade. These are binary pass/fail:

CTQ CharacteristicWhat to CheckWhy Critical
Powers onBoot to home screen unassistedNon-functional stock has zero resale value
IMEI not blacklistedCheck against carrier/GSMA databasesBlocked units are unsellable in most markets
Model and capacity correctCompare IMEI/serial to order specWrong model = misdescription; grounds for full return
No iCloud / Google Account lockAttempt activation on clean SIMFMI/activation-locked units require original account
No carrier lock (if sold unlocked)Insert foreign SIMLocked units mis-sold as unlocked are chargeback-grade disputes
Screen displays correctlyFull-screen image, no dead zonesDead pixels or LCD bleed render the unit unsellable
Touch fully functionalMulti-point touch testPartial touch failure is not cosmetically repairable
Cellular functionalRegister on networkNo signal = core function failure

Should-Have: Major CTQs

Major CTQs affect resale value materially but do not render the unit unsellable in all grades. Failures here should trigger negotiation, not automatic rejection, unless your spec says otherwise.

CTQ CharacteristicThresholdNote
Battery health>80% (Apple); >75% (Android, varies)Below threshold → Grade B or price deduction
Cameras functionalFront and rear capture and displayBlurry or non-functional camera is a major functional defect
Charging port functionalCharge to 100% and data syncIntermittent ports fail in field quickly
All physical buttons functionalVolume, power, muteDead buttons are costly to repair at scale
No missing screws or back panel damageVisual checkIndicates prior unauthorised repair
Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectConnect to network/deviceAntenna faults common in water-damaged units
Speakers and microphone functionalCall test, speaker testOften missed in cosmetic-only inspection

Nice-to-Have: Minor CTQs

Minor CTQs affect grade classification and therefore price but do not affect function. These are the cosmetic criteria that define Grade A vs Grade AB vs Grade B distinctions.

CTQ CharacteristicGrade AGrade ABGrade B
Screen conditionNo scratches visible at arm’s lengthLight hairlines, no cracksDeep scratches, no cracked glass
Back glass / housingPristineLight scuffsVisible scratches, no structural damage
Corners and edgesNo dentsLight corner wearDents acceptable, no separation
Accessories includedFull OEM boxDevice only acceptableDevice only

How Inspection Companies Use CTQ to Build Checksheets

Third-party inspection companies operating in Shenzhen (SGS, HQTS, V-Trust, and specialist phone QC firms) structure their reports around exactly this three-tier CTQ model. When you commission a pre-shipment inspection:

  1. You provide your CTQ spec — which characteristics are Critical, which are Major, and your AQL (Acceptable Quality Level) thresholds for each.
  2. The inspector builds a checksheet mapping every CTQ to a physical test and a pass/fail criterion.
  3. The inspection report lists defect counts by tier and calculates whether the shipment passes AQL at each severity level.
  4. The pass/fail decision is generated automatically from your pre-agreed thresholds — no subjective judgment at the point of inspection.

Standard AQL in phone inspection is typically AQL 2.5 for Major defects (approximately 3% Major defect rate tolerated at 95% confidence for a 2,000-unit lot) and AQL 4.0 for Minor defects. Critical defects are typically set at AQL 0 — zero tolerance.

Defining Your Own CTQ Spec Sheet

When briefing an inspection company in Shenzhen or Hong Kong, provide a written CTQ spec as a standalone document, separate from the purchase order. It should contain:

Section 1: Scope

  • Product: model(s) covered
  • Inspection point: pre-shipment at supplier warehouse
  • Sample size and AQL level by defect tier

Section 2: Critical CTQ list Each characteristic with test method and pass/fail criterion. “Powers on” must specify: within how many seconds, to which screen state, under which charge level.

Section 3: Major CTQ list Each characteristic with threshold. Battery health must specify: tested using which method (iOS Settings, third-party app, cycle count limit), minimum percentage.

Section 4: Minor CTQ list Cosmetic grading matrix. Define each grade in writing with reference photos if available. “Grade A” is not a universal standard — your Grade A must be defined in your spec.

Section 5: Sampling and reporting State the lot size, sample size per AQL standard, and required report format (photos per defect category, IMEI list of sampled units).

A one-page written CTQ spec takes under an hour to produce. Inspection companies in the Shenzhen/HK corridor are accustomed to receiving them. Suppliers who resist pre-shipment inspection against a written spec are a due-diligence flag.

CTQ Specs in Dispute Resolution

The commercial value of a written CTQ spec extends beyond inspection. It is evidence.

If a shipment arrives and 15% of units fail to power on, your dispute with the supplier turns on whether you agreed a Critical CTQ for power-on functionality. With a written spec signed (or emailed with acknowledgment) before shipment, you have a documented standard the supplier knew about. Without it, suppliers routinely argue that “Grade B used phones always have some issues” — a position that is difficult to contest without written criteria.

Escrow services and trade finance providers increasingly request CTQ documentation as part of their due diligence process. Buyers working through inspection services like those recommended by gsmExchange or MobileSources exhibitors should treat the CTQ spec as standard pre-order paperwork alongside the purchase order and proforma invoice.

In cross-border disputes — particularly those involving UAE, African, or Latin American buyers purchasing from Chinese or HK suppliers — written CTQ specs reduce arbitration ambiguity and support claims under trade insurance policies.

Summary

CTQ TierEffect of FailureTypical AQL
CriticalUnit rejected automaticallyAQL 0 (zero tolerance)
MajorPrice adjustment or reject by lotAQL 2.5
MinorGrade reclassificationAQL 4.0

Define your CTQ before you place the order. Provide it in writing to your inspection company before they enter the warehouse. Keep a copy for every transaction. It is the single most effective document in wholesale phone quality control.