When a critical part goes on allocation or hits end-of-life, every OEM and EMS buyer in Europe faces the same question: should you stay with a franchised (authorised) distributor, or work with an independent distributor? The answer shapes your lead times, your protection against counterfeits, and whether your production line keeps running during a shortage.
This guide breaks down the difference between franchised and independent electronic components distributors, the pros and cons of each, and a simple framework European procurement teams can use to choose the right channel for every line on the BOM.
What is a franchised (authorised) distributor?
A franchised distributor (also called an authorised distributor) has a direct contract with the component manufacturer to sell its parts. Think of the large catalogue distributors that stock thousands of brands straight from the factory.
Strengths:
- Full traceability from the manufacturer, with a Certificate of Conformance and original factory packaging.
- Brand-new stock, current date codes, and manufacturer warranty.
- Access to the latest datasheets, lifecycle data, and engineering support.
Limits:
- When a part is on allocation or in shortage, authorised channels are usually the first to run dry, with lead times stretching to 26+ weeks.
- High minimum order quantities (MOQ) and full-reel pricing can force you to over-buy.
- Once a part reaches end-of-life, the franchised channel simply stops carrying it.
What is an independent distributor?
An independent distributor is not tied to a single manufacturer. Instead, it sources electronic components across the open market, from factory excess, surplus inventory, and a global network of vetted suppliers. This is the channel that solves the problems the franchised model cannot.
Strengths:
- Finds hard-to-find, obsolete, and end-of-life parts that authorised distributors no longer stock.
- Breaks reels and supplies the exact quantity you need, bypassing manufacturer MOQs.
- Moves fast during a shortage, tapping cross-border stock to prevent a line-down situation.
- Often more flexible on price, with room to negotiate beyond a fixed price break.
What to watch:
- Quality varies between providers. The counterfeit risk is real in the open market, so vetting matters.
- You must insist on traceability, documentation, and inspection (more on that below).
Franchised vs independent distributor: side by side
| Factor | Franchised / authorised | Independent |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Direct from manufacturer | Open market, factory excess, vetted network |
| Best for | New designs, in-production parts | Shortage, allocation, obsolete & end-of-life parts |
| Lead time in a shortage | Long (first to run out) | Short (alternative stock) |
| Minimum order quantity | High (full reels) | Flexible (cut tape, broken reels) |
| Counterfeit risk | Very low | Low when ISO 9001 vetting is applied |
| Obsolete part access | None once discontinued | Yes |
Which should European OEMs and EMS companies use?
It is not either/or. The smartest procurement teams use both channels and pick per situation:
- Use a franchised distributor for new designs and high-volume, in-production parts where current date codes and manufacturer warranty matter most.
- Use an independent distributor when a part is on allocation, in shortage, discontinued, or when MOQs would force costly excess inventory. A quick BOM evaluation shows which lines are at risk and belong in the independent channel.
- Plan ahead for end-of-life with proactive obsolescence management so a discontinued part never catches you without a sourcing route.
For a deeper playbook on keeping production running when parts dry up, see our guide on sourcing electronic components during shortages.
How to vet an independent electronic components distributor
The independent channel is only as safe as the partner you choose. Before you place an order, confirm the distributor offers:
- ISO 9001 quality processes and documented incoming inspection.
- Traceability and a Certificate of Conformance for every shipment.
- Anti-counterfeit testing and a verified, auditable supplier network.
- RoHS and REACH compliance for the European market.
- Real references from other OEM and EMS customers in your sector.
Where GlobX fits
GlobX is a Europe-based independent electronic components distributor headquartered near Frankfurt, Germany. We give OEM and EMS teams the speed and flexibility of the open market without the counterfeit risk: a vetted global supplier network, ISO 9001 quality checks, full traceability, and fast EU delivery.
Whether you are fighting a shortage, hunting an obsolete part, or trying to avoid a high-MOQ over-buy, we source exactly what your BOM needs. Browse the live components catalogue or explore our sourcing and excess-stock services.
Need a part fast, or want a second opinion on a risky BOM line? Talk to the GlobX sourcing team for a 24-hour quote.