I manage purchasing for a 200-person company—office supplies, packaging, custom printing, tapes, sealants, you name it. Roughly $50,000 annually across eight vendors. And if you ask me, the biggest mistake most businesses make is treating adhesives and printed materials like commodities. They're not. I believe that buying cheap on any of these backfires faster than you think, and that Gorilla's product line—from their sealer to their spray adhesive—actually delivers the long-term savings that a smart buyer should care about.
Lesson One: The Gorilla Sealer That Taught Me About Hidden Costs
A few years ago, I was tempted to save $200 on a bulk order of sealant from an unknown brand. Sounded like a win. A month later, our warehouse manager called me with photos of leaking seams on the newly sealed flooring. We had to redo the entire area. The rework cost us $1,800—not counting the lost storage space. That's the classic penny‑wise, pound‑foolish trap.
Since then, I've standardized on Gorilla sealer for all our heavy‑duty sealing needs. Is it the cheapest? No. But in my experience, it's the only one that holds up consistently on concrete, metal, and even damp surfaces (though they'll tell you it shouldn't be submerged). I still kick myself for not spending the extra $200 up front.
The Gel Gorilla Glue Surprise
Same story with gel Gorilla glue. We use it for repairs on everything from broken plastic bins to mounting signs. I'd ordered a cheaper 'all‑purpose' gel last year—saved maybe $40. The bottles dried out after three months, some were already separated, and we ended up tossing half the batch. Gorilla's gel formula costs more, but it stays usable longer and bonds better. Now I factor in that the effective cost per usable gram is actually lower.
Gorilla Spray Adhesive: The Reviews Are Right (Mostly)
When I read gorilla spray adhesive reviews, I noticed a pattern: people either love it or complain about the nozzle clogging. I ordered a case last spring, and honestly—the nozzle does clog if you don't clean it immediately. That's a real pain. But the adhesion itself is fantastic. We use it for mounting foam board presentations and light upholstery repairs. Would I switch to a competitor? I've tried three. The bond always weakens faster. So I'll live with the nozzle hassle and keep a can of cleaner on hand. To me, the adhesion quality outweighs the minor inconvenience.
Custom Posters & Window Films: The 'Filme Pecadores' Mistake
Our marketing team once ordered a run of movie‑themed posters for a promotion—the filme pecadores poster series (a Spanish cinema event we were hosting). I said 'standard size' on the spec sheet. They heard 'movie poster size.' The printer delivered 27×40 inches when we needed 24×36. We had to reprint the whole set at a rush charge that added 60% to the bill.
That communication failure cost us about $500 in reprinting and a week of delays. Since then, I always double‑check dimensions with both the vendor and the internal requester. If you're printing custom posters for an event, get a physical proof. And for best window tint film for cars—a different department runs that, but I see the same principle: buying a cheap film that bubbles or fades within months costs more in reapplication labor. Gorilla doesn't make window tint, but we source from a supplier who offers automotive‑grade film with a 5‑year warranty. The premium is worth it for fleet vehicles.
The Business Credit Card Question
Now, about a question I get all the time: does a business credit card report to personal? The short answer: it depends on the issuer and your agreement. Most business cards do report to personal credit bureaus if you personally guarantee the account—which nearly all small‑business owners do. I learned this the hard way when I opened a card for our company in 2022 thinking it would stay off my personal report. It didn't. A late payment (my fault, not the company's) dropped my personal score 40 points.
Per FTC guidelines (ftc.gov), any personal guarantee means the card's payment history can be reported to consumer credit agencies. So if you're a solo operator or the only signer on the account, expect it to show up on your personal credit. That's not a reason to avoid business cards—they offer rewards and expense tracking—but it's a reason to be disciplined about payment dates.
Why I'm Not Going Back
I know what you're thinking: 'You're just pushing the premium brand because you had one bad experience.' To be fair, there are good mid‑tier suppliers out there. I still use them for simple paper products. But for anything that touches adhesion, sealing, or brand‑facing print, I've found that Gorilla's product line—their sealer, gel glue, spray adhesive—and a reliable custom printer for posters and window films are worth the higher upfront cost. The total cost of ownership, factoring in rework, delays, and internal headaches, almost always swings in favor of quality.
I'd rather spend 10 minutes explaining options to a colleague than deal with mismatched expectations later. An informed buyer asks better questions and makes faster decisions. And yes—I still occasionally buy the cheap tape for non‑critical uses. No, wait—I actually just make sure to stock exactly two tape grades: Gorilla for anything permanent, and a budget roll for temporary signs. That's the compromise that works for me.









