Pavel Perlov explains why investing in better chemistry creates lasting value, outperforming short-term cost-cutting strategies.
Every business eventually hits the same fork in the road: cut costs to protect margins, or invest in something better and bet on growth. Pavel Perlov, President and CEO of EFC Gases & Advanced Materials, has made his position clear. Chasing the cheapest option rarely builds anything that lasts, while giving customers access to better chemistry tends to pay off for years.
What You'll Discover:
The Pitfalls of Competitive Pricing Strategies
Suppliers who compete purely on price end up in a race that never really ends. Once you’re the cheapest option, someone else undercuts you, and the cycle starts again. Something has to give, and it’s usually quality or the ability to keep improving the product at all.
That tradeoff gets dangerous fast in high-tech industries. Manufacturing equipment and technology change quickly, and a supplier that’s squeezed every dollar out of its budget often can’t afford to keep up. Specialized materials require specialized infrastructure, and cutting prices too aggressively puts real strain on the supply chain that global manufacturers depend on.
Perlov’s take is that chasing short-term savings misses the bigger picture. A supplier that keeps a steady, reliable flow of premium materials moving is worth more to a customer than one offering a slightly better price this quarter.
Elevating Customer Performance with Precision Solutions
Access to newer chemistry changes what a customer can actually do. Improved gases and material blends enable manufacturers to refine their processes and reduce emissions, which matters more every year as environmental standards tighten.
This is especially true for semiconductor and aerospace manufacturers, where the margin for error is basically zero. These industries require extremely pure materials and results that withstand intense scrutiny. When a supplier can deliver that consistently, the relationship stops looking like a transaction and starts looking more like a partnership.
Local storage and high-purity materials play a big role here too. When a manufacturer has quick access to clean, reliable inputs, equipment stays running longer and less material gets wasted in the process. That efficiency adds up, especially at scale.
Accelerating Innovation Through Dedicated Infrastructure
Staying ahead of demand takes more than good intentions. It requires building out research and development capacity well before customers need it, so complex materials are already developed by the time the market catches up.
That kind of infrastructure also means better testing and purification tools, letting technical teams examine gas mixtures down to trace amounts. For industries working with sensitive materials, that level of detail isn’t optional. Heavy investment in domestic testing and analysis also reduces reliance on outside countries, which matters when instability elsewhere can otherwise disrupt a customer’s supply chain overnight.
Being ready before the market shifts means having materials made, tested, and available rather than scrambling once demand appears. None of that happens without a serious commitment to safety and regulatory compliance. Organizations like the Environmental Protection Agency set clear guidelines that companies in this space have to meet, and building around those standards from the start avoids costly problems later.
Meeting the Complex Needs of Evolving Global Markets
Semiconductor and clean energy industries are under real pressure to operate more sustainably, and that pressure isn’t slowing down. Perlov has argued that the smarter long-term play is collaboration. Companies that work together to build genuinely greener products tend to outperform those chasing short-term profit at the expense of everything else.
By taking that particular approach, you ensure you protect customers from future regulatory headaches. When businesses make the effort to invest in better products, they now are less likely to get caught off guard by new rules later, and they end up with a foundation that holds up over time. For sectors moving as fast as semiconductors and clean energy, that stability isn’t a nice bonus. It’s close to a requirement.
The Long-Term Value of Value-Added Material Sourcing
Prioritizing better chemistry over lower costs benefits everyone in the supply chain, not just the supplier. When companies focus on producing purer materials and recovering as much product as possible during manufacturing, they stay competitive even as market conditions shift.
That’s the throughline in Perlov’s philosophy: partnering with a company that actually invests in advanced materials matters more for long-term growth than any short-term discount ever could. Getting better at the work itself, rather than simply spending less on it, is what keeps a business relevant.
Final Thoughts
Pavel Perlov often points back to a simple test when evaluating whether a growth strategy will hold up: does it make the customer more capable, or does it just make the invoice smaller? Cutting costs can satisfy a budget for a quarter, but it rarely changes what a customer can actually build. Investing in better chemistry does both. It gives partners tools they didn’t have before, and it gives EFC a reason to keep showing up as a supplier worth calling first. That’s the kind of relationship that survives a downturn instead of getting renegotiated during one.





