
There are things you learn about chemical sourcing that no spec sheet can teach you — lessons that only surface after thousands of shipments, market cycles, and moments where things don’t go to plan.
At Meadows, we’ve moved millions of pounds of chemical product across industries with challenging conditions and high stakes. What that volume builds, over time, is pattern recognition. And in this business, that’s worth more than almost anything else you can bring to a sourcing conversation.
Here’s what those patterns have taught us.
The Cheapest Bid Is Almost Never the Cheapest Option
Every purchasing manager knows this in theory. Most still feel the pull to chase the lowest number — but there are hidden costs that don’t show up on the original quote:
- off-spec product that needs to be disposed of or reworked
- shipments that miss delivery windows and idle a production line
- suppliers who go quiet right when you need a rush order or a quick answer on documentation
By the time you add it all up, that “cheap” drum of solvent cost two or three times what a reliable source would have. The sourcing decisions that hold up are the ones made on total cost — not unit price.
Secondary Supply Isn’t a Compromise. It’s Strategic.
One of the most persistent misconceptions in chemical procurement is that secondary product (surplus, off-spec, or byproduct material) is a fallback for when you can’t get prime. That framing is backwards.
Done right, secondary sourcing (what we call Beneficial Reuse) is a deliberate supply chain strategy. It gives buyers access to real product at real prices, often from sources that aren’t competing for the same constrained prime supply everyone else is chasing. In tight markets, that flexibility is the difference between keeping a process running and waiting.
We built our business around Beneficial Reuse — finding downstream applications for material that would otherwise go to waste — long before it was fashionable. The customers who’ve embraced secondary sourcing as a strategic tool have consistently outperformed their peers on margins.
Your Supplier Network Is Either an Asset or a Liability
Chemical distribution is a relationship business. When supply gets tight, who gets the call first? When something goes sideways, who picks up the phone?
The customers who get taken care of in difficult markets are the ones who’ve built real relationships with their distributors. There’s trust on both sides, and trust moves product when nothing else does.
Logistics Affects Fulfillment and Margins
Freight costs for bulk and specialty chemicals are notoriously misleading. Fuel surcharges, handling fees, packaging conversions, and last-mile complexity can compound in ways that don’t surface until they hit the P&L. A supplier quoted you $X per pound. What did you actually pay, all in?
The distributors worth keeping are the ones who think through packaging format, routing, timing, and consolidation as part of the sourcing conversation — not the ones who treat delivery as someone else’s problem.
Reliability Is the Rarest Thing in This Business
Speed is easy to promise. Flexibility is easy to pitch. Reliability — actually getting what you ordered, when you were told, at spec, with someone available to answer your questions — is harder to find than it should be.
When we ask long-standing customers why they keep coming back, reliability shows up in the first sentence. The fact that Meadows does what they say they’re going to do.
We’ve been doing this a long time. If you want to work with a team that’s seen enough to know what matters (and what doesn’t), we’d like to hear from you.

About the Author
Jason Miller, President
With a successful 35+ year career in the chemical industry and a strong understanding of the value that distribution channels bring to both customers and suppliers, Jason brings expertise in strategic direction, innovation, and organizational leadership. He excels in data-driven performance management and has a history of delivering results in highly competitive spaces. His experience spans chemical and environmental services to energy, home and personal care, human nutrition, industrial cleaning, and semiconductor industries, among others.
