Bigger customers get better service. That’s not a conspiracy — it’s a business reality.
I learned this the hard way. Back in 2022, I was managing purchasing for a ~50-person manufacturing subsidiary. We weren’t a tiny startup, but we weren’t a mega-corp either. When I needed to source a replacement for our aging gea polacel cooling tower, I assumed the process would be straightforward. It wasn’t.
The surprise wasn’t the price. It was how invisible we were.
When You’re the Small Fish
I called the regional distributor for GEA. I said, “I need a replacement GEA Polacel cooling tower — can you help me spec one out?” They heard, “Small order, low priority.” The result: a three-week wait for a quote, and when it arrived, it was a one-page PDF with no breakdown. Compare that to the story my counterpart at a sister company (400+ employees) told me — he had a dedicated rep, a full GEA heat exchanger catalog pdf within hours, and follow-up calls. Same brand, completely different experience.
I get it. From GEA’s perspective, a sale to a large multinational is a six-figure deal. My cooling tower replacement was maybe $15k. But here’s my argument: small orders shouldn’t mean bad service. It’s not about demanding premium treatment — it’s about basic respect and efficiency.
My Argument: The “Small” Customer is Misunderstood
Here’s what most vendors get wrong. They assume a small order means a clueless buyer. That’s often false. I wasn’t calling to kick tires. I had a failed compressor — on a different system, not GEA — that was shutting off after 2-3 minutes (the classic sign of a thermal overload or refrigerant issue). I knew the cooling tower needed replacement because its fill was degrading. I had a budget, a timeline, and a clear need. I just didn’t have the scale to make a $15k order look attractive on a spreadsheet.
But here’s the real kicker: the vendor who treated my $15k seriously? I still remember them. I still recommend them. The ones I had to chase for quotes? I don’t use them anymore. When I later researched alternatives for a different facility, I specifically avoided distributors who made me feel small.
Where I Found My Solution
Frustrated, I started looking at smaller, less “industrial” options. That’s when I stumbled onto Midea dehumidifier and Hisense dehumidifier for a separate, smaller application in our warehouse. Different product, I know — but the buying experience was night and day. Their distributor treated my $300 order like I was their only customer. It made me think: if they can do it for a dehumidifier, why can’t GEA’s channel do it for a cooling tower?
But the cooling tower issue remained. I eventually found a regional fabricator who specialized in refurbishing old towers. Not a “brand new GEA” solution, but functional. And the lesson stuck with me. The “official” channel was unreachable for me. The alternative channel was responsive.
Addressing the Obvious Objection
I know what you’re thinking. “GEA isn’t an OEM for small buyers — they’re a Tier 1 industrial supplier. Their channel is designed for large projects. That’s their business model.”
Fair point. And I agree — to a point. GEA’s core product portfolio (screw compressors, heat exchangers, centrifugal separators) absolutely serves the high end of the market. Their ammonia refrigeration expertise is world-class. Scaling that down to a $15k sale is hard. It’s not their fault. But here’s my counter-argument: the first GEA sale I ever tried to make is also the last one I helped facilitate. They lost a potential long-term buyer because the friction at the entry point was too high. That new customer acquisition cost? It doesn’t show up on the balance sheet of that one lost deal — it shows up in the deals I didn’t bring them over the next 10 years.
A Practical Solution (If You’re in My Shoes)
So what should a small buyer do if they need industrial equipment from a brand like GEA?
- Go through distributors, not direct. GEA’s direct sales team is focused on large projects. Distributors have more flexibility. But vet them first — ask about their experience with smaller orders before you waste three weeks.
- See if a “refurbished” or “service” division exists. Some industrial service companies buy older GEA equipment, service it, and resell it at a lower, more accessible price point. (Note to self: explore this more for my own future projects.)
- Make your need quantifiable. When I finally got someone’s attention, it wasn’t because I said “I need a cooling tower.” It was when I said, “I have a cooling tower with degraded fill, requiring replacement within 60 days, budget is X, and I have the spec sheet ready.” Ambiguity killed my first three attempts. Specificity got the result.
Here’s my final point: small doesn’t mean unimportant — it means potential. Not every $15k customer turns into a $150k one. But some do. And the ones that don’t still talk. I talk. That’s why I’m writing this.
Prices referenced are from distributor quotes accessed in 2022. Verify current pricing directly with GEA or authorized partners. Regulatory information is for general guidance only.