Standards are always a good thing.  In going from one instrument to another, and even as the same instrument changes, things change.  Thus a retention time that was good on one instrument may not be valid for identifying a compound on another instrument - it may not even  be valid on the same instrument just days later.
If you are going to run the same mixture that was run on that other instrument and it has been carefully kept, it can be a standard.  But be careful of the quality of that standard.  The quality of your work is only as good as the quality of your standards. 
If you need to identify several compounds and you know that all are in the mix, you may not need a standard that is suitable for quantitative analysis, but you need to be sure that the specific compunds are present and can not be confused with contaminants in the mixture.
Commercially prepared standards are well characterized, have been properly packaged, and have a known shelf life.  Some of us bet our paychecks on the quality of those standards.