Let's be real you will need to talk to the company at some point or to someone in the company.
Let’s be real, we buy stuff for work from Amazon and never talk to anyone, ever. LOL.
But not enough info to go on. If I’m buying a commodity item, nowadays it really is Amazon. We keep drawers full of Amazon Basics cables, adapters, and such in the IT dept. They’re reasonably priced, decent build quality, and nobody has ever complained about any of them.
If I’m buying a $70,000 phone system with $30,000 a year in licensing fees and support contracts, you’d better show up as a personal reference from someone I know and better not say anything that would make me not trust that you have my best interests at heart, even if you’re making a decent profit.
In fact you’d better be making a decent profit because I know how support budgets work, and if you’re not making enough money on me, you aren’t hiring enough support staff.
An example of something many buy but won’t always do on price is print shop work. We run one of those. A print shop that does everything bottom dollar and has no margin won’t be able to quickly fix a mistake YOU made and still deliver the product after hours, or whatever needs to be done.
But if you’re really broke, you’re really broke. Go with the cheap one. We won’t print the job that cheap. We’re not huge amounts higher but we aren’t Kinko’s self serve either.
It has a lot to do with how tight your budget is and what you can put up with, and whether the vendor being a pain actually causes you any business risk.
All sorts of other variables. My boss likes to buy from companies that give him polo shirts. Hahaha. Not kidding. He doesn’t realize I’ve noticed it but if literally everything else is equal and we have a hard time picking a vendor, the one who gave him a shirt, wins every time. Hahaha.
I had one customer when I was a vendor who demanded we buy him golf balls. He was the subject matter expert for a particular telecom specialty at AT&T. I always brought him golf balls. Even if I couldn’t get company ones. I’d have bought those stupid balls with my own money if I had to, but my boss knew what was up and even in low marketing years with no company golf balls, he never once turned down my expense report with golf balls on it. LOL.