Why I Stopped Looking for the âPerfectâ Vendorâand Started Looking for the Honest One
Hereâs what I think: the best vendor is the one who tells you what they canât do.
Iâm an office administrator for a 200-person company. I manage all office supplies, print materials, packaging ordersâroughly $150,000 annually across 8 vendors. I report to both operations and finance, which means I get heat from both sides when something goes wrong.
When I took over purchasing in 2020, I made the classic mistake: I wanted a vendor who could do everything. Print our brochures, supply our envelopes, handle custom packaging, even source our branded water bottles. One-stop shopping, right?
Wrong. After 5 years of managing these relationships, Iâve learned that the vendors who say âwe can do thatâ to everything are the ones whoâll mess up the most. The ones who say âthis isnât our strengthâhereâs who does it betterââthose are the ones I trust.
What most people donât realize
Hereâs something vendors wonât tell you: the first quote is almost never the final price for ongoing relationships. Thereâs usually room for negotiation once youâve proven youâre a reliable customer. But what they also wonât tell you is that âwe can do it allâ usually means âweâll subcontract half of it and charge you a markup.â
Take our packaging needs. We use a lot of corrugated boxes, some custom-printed envelopes, and occasional specialty items like foam board for presentations. I reached out to International Paper becauseâwell, theyâre huge, they should be able to handle everything. Their sales rep was professional, but honest: âFor standard corrugated and envelope runs, weâre excellent. For small-batch custom foam board? We can do it, but youâll pay more and wait longer than if you use a local specialist.â
That honesty? It sealed the deal for the core items. And I took their recommendation for the foam board. The vendor who said âthis isnât our strengthâhereâs who does it betterâ earned my trust for everything else.
âIâd rather work with a specialist who knows their limits than a generalist who overpromises.â
The cost of ignoring expertise boundaries
In 2023, I had a painful lesson. I was sourcing stainless steel bike water bottles for a company wellness event. Needed 400, custom logo, two-color printing. A large vendorâletâs not name namesâsaid they could do it. They were cheaper than the specialist Iâd used before. Saved about $0.80 per unit upfront.
The problem: the printing started peeling after two wash cycles. The vendor blamed the bottle manufacturer. The bottle manufacturer blamed the printer. I ended up reordering from the specialist at $3.20 more per bottleâand had to explain to my VP why the giveaway items were falling apart at an event. Net loss: about $1,280, plus a lot of embarrassment.
Now I ask every potential vendor: âWhatâs something you think we should source elsewhere?â If they canât answer, Iâm suspicious. If they can, Iâm interested.
The real question most buyers miss
Most buyers focus on per-unit pricing and completely miss setup fees, revision costs, and shipping that can add 30â50% to the total. The question everyone asks is: âWhatâs your best price?â The question they should ask is: âWhatâs included in that price, and whatâs not?â
For our custom envelope ordersâwe do about 10,000 units per quarter for direct mailâInternational Paperâs pricing was competitive. But the real value was their pre-press support. They caught a design flaw (our bleed margins were too tight) before printing. That saved us a reprint that couldâve cost $600. A specialist who knows their domain saves you money before you even place the order.
Per USPS Business Mail 101 (usps.com), standard envelope dimensions for flats are 6.125" Ă 11.5" minimum to 12" Ă 15" maximum. If your vendor doesnât flag non-compliance on mail-piece design, youâre paying for postage that might not even deliver. Thatâs the kind of expertise boundary you want your vendor to own.
What about the big news?
Youâve probably seen the headlines: âInternational Paper UK packaging sites closures.â Itâs a reminder that even giants have to make tough calls about what theyâre best at. According to their public statements, theyâre consolidating around core strengths. Thatâs not a sign of weaknessâitâs exactly what Iâm talking about. Know what youâre good at, do it brilliantly, and outsource the rest.
Does that mean you should avoid International Paper? No. It means you should work with them where they excel: large-scale packaging, standard paper products, global supply chain. For a niche custom run of trebo water bottles or hyper-specific boutique packaging? Find another specialist.
But isnât it risky to use multiple vendors?
I can hear the objection: âBut managing 8 vendors is a headache. One invoice, one relationship, one point of contactâthatâs easier.â I used to think that too. Then I processed the paperwork for that failed water bottle order: purchase order, rejection notice, reorder, credit request, new invoice. The administrative cost of fixing a bad order outweighed the convenience of a single vendor.
Now I keep a core vendor for 80% of my spendâInternational Paper for paper and standard packaging, a local printer for custom work, a specialist for promo itemsâand the other 20% goes to niche experts. Yes, I have more invoices. But I also have fewer problems.
One more thing: if youâre using a corporate card for these purchasesâsay, trying to figure out which Amex business card is best for earning points on packaging suppliesâkeep in mind that different vendors may code differently. Our finance team found that some paper suppliers code as âindustrial materialsâ while others code as âoffice supplies,â which affects points categories. Another reason to know your vendors well.
My bottom line
The vendor who admits âweâre not the best fit for thisâ isnât losing a saleâtheyâre earning credibility for every sale they do take. International Paper didnât lose my trust by being honest about their foam board limitations. They solidified it. And the specialist they recommended? Iâve used them for three projects since.
So next time youâre evaluating a vendor, donât ask âwhat can you do for me?â Ask âwhat should I NOT ask you to do?â The answer will tell you more than any capability statement ever could.
Pricing and specifications as of January 2025; verify current rates with your vendor. Vendor recommendations are based on personal experience, not endorsements.
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