There's a bound in Lang's book Fundamentals of Diophantine Geometry that's not great in terms of its dependence on the degree and number of variables, but it's very explicit. (Lang works with any field containing $\mathbb{Q}$, but I'll just state it for $\mathbb{C}$ coefficients).
Proposition 2.3 (page 57) Let $d\ge0$. Let $f$ and $g$ be polynomials in $\mathbb{C}[X_1,\ldots,X_n]$ satisfying $\deg(f)+\deg(g)<d$. Then
$$
\frac{1}{4^{d^n}}|fg|_\infty \le |f|_\infty|g|_\infty \le 4^{d^n}|fg|_\infty.
$$
If one instead uses a $p$-adic absolute value, the same estimate is true without the $4^{d^n}$ factors, i.e., $|fg|_p=|f|_p|g|_p$. This is a version of Gauss's lemma.
Final note: the way that your problem is phrased, there is no bound, since if $G$ is a factor of $F$, then so is $cG$ for any nonzero constant $G$. In Lang's formulation, if you shift a constant from one factor to another, it doesn't affect the statement of the result.