What to Send an EMS Partner for a Faster, More Accurate Quote

EMS Basics

What to Send an EMS Partner for a Faster, More Accurate Quote

A practical quote-package checklist for OEMs preparing a PCB assembly, prototype, pilot run, or production build.

Quote readiness BOM + Gerbers Test + programming notes
BOM Gerbers / ODB++ Assembly Drawing Test Plan Quote Review scope, risk, schedule

Quote package

12

point checklist for a complete request.

What improves

Fewer gapsFaster reviewBetter scope

Clear inputs help engineering, sourcing, and production quote with fewer assumptions.

New blog direction: practical manufacturing guidance from the Micron floor, built to help customers move from design to reliable assembly with fewer surprises.

When you are ready to quote a new electronics build, the quality of the information you send matters. A complete quote package helps your EMS partner understand the scope, identify potential issues early, and respond with a more accurate cost and timeline.

Transitioning the blog

Good quotes start before the board reaches the floor.

As Micron’s blog expands beyond recent tariff-focused content, we will be sharing more practical guidance from the manufacturing floor: what helps projects move smoothly, what causes delays, and how OEMs can reduce risk from prototype through production.

This first topic is one of the most important: what to send your EMS partner when requesting a quote.

Quote package BOM Gerbers
A complete quote package gives engineering, sourcing, and production teams the context they need to quote with fewer assumptions.

The takeaway: a quote package does not need to be complicated. It does need to be complete, current, and clear enough for an EMS partner to evaluate materials, assembly, test, documentation, and schedule.

Files and design data

The core files your EMS partner needs.

The first group of files defines the product: what parts go on the board, where they go, how the board is fabricated, and what the finished assembly should look like.

Core quote files Four inputs that help define the product before quoting begins. BOM MPNs, quantities, alternates Gerbers Layers, mask, drill, copper PnP / Centroid X/Y, rotation, board side Drawings Orientation, notes, hardware
The best quote requests include both machine-readable data and human-readable drawings, so engineering and production can see the same intent.

1. Bill of Materials

The BOM is one of the most important files in any quote package. It should include manufacturer part numbers, reference designators, quantities per assembly, descriptions, approved alternates, do-not-install notes, RoHS or leaded requirements, and revision level.

Approved alternates are especially helpful. Component availability can change quickly, and pre-approved alternate parts can prevent delays during quoting, sourcing, and production.

2. Gerber or ODB++ files

Your EMS partner will need the fabrication data for the printed circuit board. These files help the manufacturing team understand the board layout, copper layers, solder mask, silkscreen, drill data, and other important PCB details.

3. Pick-and-place or centroid data

Pick-and-place data tells the assembly equipment where each component should be placed. Accurate centroid data helps reduce setup time and prevents errors during machine programming.

4. Assembly drawings

Assembly drawings provide the human-readable instructions for how the board should be built. They are especially important for mixed-technology builds, through-hole parts, connectors, mechanical hardware, labels, or anything that may not be obvious from the BOM alone.

5. PCB fabrication drawing

If your EMS partner is also quoting the bare board or managing a turnkey build, include the PCB fabrication drawing. Board dimensions, material requirements, copper weight, finish, thickness, stackup, tolerances, and controlled impedance notes can affect cost and lead time.

Scope and assumptions

Quote the build, not just the board.

Two projects can use the same PCB data and still require very different quoting assumptions. Share the business and production context behind the build.

01

Quantities

Include prototype, pilot, production, and annual volume targets when available.

02

Schedule

Explain whether the build supports a demo, regulatory test, replenishment order, or hard ship date.

03

Revision control

Confirm that BOM, Gerbers, drawings, firmware, and instructions all match the current revision.

It is also helpful to clarify whether the build is consigned, turnkey, or hybrid. Each model can work well, but they affect quoting, scheduling, receiving, inventory control, and risk management.

Context changes the quote. Prototype, pilot, and production builds often need different planning assumptions. Prototype 5 to 10 units Pilot 25 to 100 units Production Repeat demand Program Forecast + revs
The same PCB may quote differently depending on the quantity, stage of the program, sourcing model, and schedule pressure.

End-of-line readiness

Bring test and programming into the quote early.

Testing and programming are easy to under-scope during quoting, but they can have a major impact on cost, schedule, documentation, and production flow.

Test and programming are part of the build. Define procedures, fixtures, firmware, and pass/fail criteria before production launch. Test procedure Fixture + DUT Programming log
Defining test, programming, serialization, and verification requirements early helps prevent late-stage production delays.

Test requirements

If test requirements are known, include in-circuit test, flying-probe test, functional test procedure, power-up instructions, calibration steps, fixture needs, pass/fail criteria, and required reports. If no test process exists yet, say so. Your EMS partner may be able to help define a practical approach.

Programming requirements

If the assembly requires firmware loading, serialization, MAC addresses, keys, device provisioning, or verification logs, include the programming files and instructions up front.

The practical list

A simple quote package checklist.

Before sending your next PCB assembly quote request, gather the following:

BOMManufacturer part numbers, quantities, alternates, notes, and revision.
Gerbers or ODB++Fabrication data for PCB layout and manufacturing review.
Pick-and-place dataReference designators, coordinates, rotation, and board side.
Assembly drawingHuman-readable build instructions and special notes.
Fabrication drawingBoard dimensions, stackup, material, finish, and tolerances.
QuantitiesPrototype, pilot, production, and annual volume expectations.
ScheduleDesired timing and the business reason behind the deadline.
Test requirementsICT, flying probe, functional test, fixtures, and pass/fail criteria.
Programming instructionsFirmware, serialization, MAC addresses, tools, and verification steps.
Special processesConformal coating, labels, packaging, cleaning, or reporting needs.
Build modelConsigned, turnkey, or hybrid material preference.
Revision controlConfirm all files match the current design revision.

Final thought

The best EMS projects start with clarity.

The best EMS projects start before the first board reaches the production floor. They start with clear data, clear expectations, and early communication.

If you have a new prototype, pilot run, or production build coming up, sending a complete quote package is one of the simplest ways to save time and reduce risk.

Have a build ready to quote?

Send your BOM, Gerbers, drawings, test notes, programming requirements, and schedule goals. Micron can review the package and help identify the clearest path from design data to reliable assembly.

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