
Showroom
Selection and finish review
Material comparison, category coordination, and earlier direction setting for project teams.
Operations Proof
This page gives project teams a working view of how George Group supports material selection, finish review, and category coordination before the conversation moves into factory-side customization and production follow-through.
Why this page matters
The goal is to show that front-end review and back-end execution belong to the same sourcing lane, not two disconnected promises.

Showroom
Material comparison, category coordination, and earlier direction setting for project teams.

Factory
Manufacturing follow-through after direction is approved and the brief moves into execution.
Selection to execution
The showroom helps teams compare and confirm direction. The factory side carries customization and production follow-through once that direction is approved.
Brochure-Backed Scale Snapshot
These figures help frame George Group as a one-stop building material sourcing and project support partner rather than a retail-style product display.
Founded in
2006
Interior & Exterior Designers
40+
Team Personnel
1,800+
Countries of Destination
120+
Material References
15,000+
Showroom
30,000 m²
Operations note
Three storage, processing, logistics, and distribution service centers—spanning over 100,000 m² across Guangxi, Jiangsu, and Guangdong—are currently under development to extend the supply chain's back-end reach.

Used to compare categories, finishes, and combinations before downstream coordination starts to fragment.
Showroom Overview
The showroom is used as a working review space rather than a retail display floor. It helps designers, developers, and sourcing teams compare directions across categories, confirm what belongs inside the same brief, and build a clearer front-end basis before quotation, sampling, and production follow-up continue.
Furniture, surfaces, lighting, sanitary, and related categories can be discussed in one visible frame instead of separate sourcing lanes.
Samples, tones, textures, and combinations can be reviewed earlier, giving the team a steadier basis for approvals and substitutions.
Designers and project teams can use the visit to confirm priorities, room logic, and the direction that should carry into the next execution step.
Why it matters
Its value is not display for its own sake. It is a calmer place to narrow direction, align finish language, and reduce guesswork in later project coordination.
Factory Overview
Once direction is clearer, factory coordination becomes the execution backbone behind customization, specification control, and production follow-up. The point is not to turn the page into a machine album, but to show that approved material and finish decisions can move into real project delivery support.
Selected directions can translate into project-specific dimensions, finishes, and coordination requirements without leaving the same working conversation.
Factory follow-up keeps approved intent connected to real production steps instead of separating design decisions from execution.
A clearer factory base helps approved materials, finishes, and specifications move forward with fewer disconnects.
Execution value
This section stays focused on execution readiness, showing how approved direction can move into coordinated manufacturing follow-through.

The factory side matters because a project needs more than a visual promise. It needs a real path from approved direction into customization and coordinated follow-through.
Operations Support
George Group's brochure presents a production team, a quality control team, project tracking service, warehousing and loading service, and international logistics services. This page keeps those pieces in one compact support chain to show the execution lane behind showroom review and factory coordination.
Back-end support chain
The goal is controlled execution after direction is approved: keep production visible, prepare the package for coordinated release, and support the shipment handoff with less disconnect.
Production & QC
The brochure connects production, quality control, and project tracking so approved direction stays visible while the order moves into controlled execution.
Warehousing & Loading
The brochure frames this stage through warehousing, professional packaging, customer consolidation, and standardized loading process support rather than warehouse scale claims.
Logistics Support
International logistics is presented as a support function around planning, customs-facing preparation, transportation coordination, and ongoing customer communication.
Visit or Inquiry
If the project is already moving, use the same working inputs to plan a showroom review or start a remote sourcing discussion. The next step should feel like coordinated project support, not a generic contact form exchange.
Best first inputs
These inputs help the team prepare category coordination, quotation basis, and the next review step with less back-and-forth.