It started with a panicked email at 4 PM on a Thursday
The subject line was all caps: URGENT – KEMET CAPACITOR NEEDED. I opened it and found a message from a founder I didn't recognize. His company was building a new blood pressure monitor, and they had just discovered that the Kemet MLCCs they ordered from a discount broker were the wrong voltage rating. The launch event was in 48 hours. If they didn't have replacement parts by Saturday morning, the entire product showcase would fall apart.
This wasn't a huge order – 1,000 units of a standard 0805 10µF ceramic capacitor. But for a small startup, every dollar counted. And the timeline was insane. Normal lead time from a Kemet distributors is 5–7 business days for small quantities. They needed it in two.
I've been handling rush orders for over six years now, and I've learned one thing: the urgent ones always come with hidden landmines. Let me walk you through what happened, because it taught me a lesson about working with small clients that I still use today.
The search for stock
First, I checked our own warehouse. We carry a broad range of Kemet capacitor series, including the T491 tantalum line and the C-series MLCCs. But the specific voltage rating (25V) was low inventory that week – we only had 200 pieces. Not enough to fill the order.
I reached out to three authorized Kemet distributors we partner with. The first had stock but required a $500 minimum order. The second could split a reel but wanted a 3-day lead time. The third – a smaller regional distributor – had exactly 1,000 pieces in stock, but their price was 30% above our usual cost. (Which, honestly, felt like a punch in the gut after the founder told me their budget was tight.)
Let me rephrase that: it wasn't that the price was unreasonable – rush margins are a thing – but I knew the founder was already stressed about the project's viability. I had to decide: do I recommend the expensive option, or keep looking?
The communication failure that almost derailed everything
I called the founder to explain the options. I said, 'We can get the parts to you by Saturday morning, but it'll cost about $200 more than you planned for.' They heard, 'There's a chance we might not make it.'
What I actually meant: the delivery was certain if we paid the rush premium. What they interpreted: maybe it works, maybe it doesn't. So they hesitated. For six hours. (Note to self: never use vague language when someone's project is on the line.)
When they finally confirmed at 10 PM, the smaller distributor had closed for the night. And their order system required manual processing. We lost six hours, and the Saturday morning deadline was suddenly in doubt.
The turnaround
At 7 AM the next day, I was on the phone with the distributor's sales manager. I explained the situation: a medical startup, a launch event, a penalty clause that would sink them. They agreed to process the order as priority and even waived the standard $25 rush fee (which honestly surprised me – not all smaller distributors are as flexible).
The parts shipped at noon via overnight express. The founder received them at 10 AM Saturday – two hours before the event started. The total extra cost: $180 in rush fees and shipping, on top of the $420 base order.
But saved? Two months later, that same founder ordered $4,000 worth of Kemet capacitors for their next product – an electric shaver that they claimed was 'the best shaver in its class.' They also referred two other medical device startups to us.
The surprise wasn't the successful delivery. It was how much long-term value came from treating a small order with the same urgency we'd give a $50,000 contract.
What I learned – and what it means for you
After that experience, we implemented a policy: any rush order from a first-time client gets a personal call, a clear timeline guarantee, and a transparent breakdown of costs – no vague promises. We also built a buffer stock for common Kemet capacitor values that startups typically need.
That $600 order taught me more than a dozen textbook case studies. Small clients aren't just potential future revenue. They're often the ones who need the most help, and they remember the vendors who step up when it counts.
Whether your product uses blood pressure monitor symbols on a display or you're building the best shaver on the market, the capacitor you choose – and the distributor you work with – can make or break your launch. We're not the cheapest Kemet distributors out there, but we're the ones who will fight for your timeline, even on a 1,000-piece order.
Pricing note: costs mentioned are from Q4 2024 and may vary. Always verify current quotes with your distributor.