Switching Suppliers: A Cross-Reference Walkthrough
Changing cleaning-chemical suppliers is rarely about a single product — it is about re-creating a whole program (the degreaser, the floor cleaner, the presoak, the warewash detergent) without disrupting the work those products do every day. The risk is mismatching chemistry or packaging and ending up with a product that behaves differently on your soils and surfaces. A structured cross-reference process removes most of that guesswork before you ever commit to an order.
Start by inventorying what you actually run today: product names, the job each one does, the typical dilution, the packaging size, and roughly how much you go through in a month or quarter. That usage picture matters as much as the product names, because the goal is to match function and volume, not to find an identical label. Pull the Safety Data Sheet and any Technical Data Sheet for each current product so you can compare on real attributes rather than marketing copy.
Next, translate each product into its functional category. A heavy shop cleaner is some flavor of degreaser; a daily mop product is likely a neutral cleaner; a wash-bay product is a presoak or brightener. Mapping to categories lets you line candidates up against the right part of the catalog — for example the industrial degreasers or floor care categories — instead of hunting product-by-product. ICD’s cross-reference tool is built for exactly this step, helping you find catalog products that fit the function you are replacing.
When you compare candidates, look past the jug to the cost-in-use and the handling profile. A concentrate and a ready-to-use product can do the same job at very different per-gallon costs once dilution is applied, so it is worth working through the math on each replacement; our concentrate vs RTU vs super-concentrate comparison lays out the framework. Confirm that the pH class, recommended dilution, and material compatibility on the candidate’s SDS/TDS line up with the surfaces and metals you clean — chemistry that is "close enough" on paper can still behave differently in practice, so verify rather than assume.
Packaging and minimum order quantity are the practical constraints that decide whether a switch is even efficient. A product that fits your chemistry but only comes in a packaging tier you cannot move freight-efficiently is not a real match. Every ICD product lists its packaging ladder and MOQ by packaging type, so you can plan an order that matches your throughput rather than overbuying to clear a minimum.
