
Who this is for
This article is for leaders working in project-based organisations—engineering projects, capital programs, infrastructure, manufacturing, and complex delivery environments—where procurement decisions directly shape cost, risk, and outcomes.
It is written from hands-on project experience, not procurement theory.
What You Will Learn in This Article
— Why reducing procurement to price is one of the most expensive mistakes on capital projects — How introducing competition unlocks commercial leverage without confrontation — Why scheduling is a procurement tool most leaders overlook — When transparency with suppliers achieves more than hard bargaining — How to apply judgment to blacklists rather than accepting them blindly
Procurement Strategies That Truly Maximize Value and Saving
Procurement is frequently reduced to one metric: price.
The lowest bidder wins.
Savings are measured in percentages.
Negotiations focus on discounts.
In real projects, this mindset quietly destroys value.
True procurement strategy is not about buying cheap.
It is about buying smart, buying at the right time, and buying with intent.
Over the years, I’ve seen procurement decisions either:
- Unlock massive value, or
- Lock projects into unnecessary cost, risk, and dependency
The difference was never policy.
It was judgment.
Example 1: Breaking supplier dominance through competition
In one project, we were heavily dependent on a dominant supplier.
They were reputable, but:
- They dictated commercial terms
- They priced at a premium
- They knew we had limited alternatives
This dependency was costing both the company and the project.
From my involvement, I introduced a new but reputed supplier who was keen to enter a market dominated by Supplier 1. The intent wasn’t disruption for its own sake—it was competition.
The challenge wasn’t procurement.
It was confidence.
I worked closely with the customer to:
- Explain the technical credibility of the new supplier
- Address performance concerns
- Demonstrate long-term value, not just price
The outcome:
- The customer accepted the new supplier
- The machinery performed well
- Commercial terms improved immediately
It became a win-win:
- The supplier gained market entry
- The client gained confidence
- We regained negotiating power
👉 Lesson:
Competition is one of the strongest value levers in procurement—but only when leaders are willing to back it.
Example 2: Consolidation is leverage—if schedules are managed
Another recurring pattern I’ve seen is teams forgetting the power of consolidation.
Buyers often argue:
“Plans are different.”
“Deliveries won’t align.”
“Schedules don’t allow it.”
In many cases, this was an excuse—not a constraint.
I intervened by working across projects to:
- Adjust delivery schedules marginally
- Preserve critical paths
- Align procurement windows
The result was the ability to:
- Consolidate equipment and machinery orders
- Increase order volumes
- Improve commercial terms significantly
The cost savings achieved were extraordinary—far beyond what individual negotiations could deliver.
👉 Lesson:
Procurement leverage often exists upstream—in planning and scheduling—not at the negotiation table.
This is closely linked to leadership’s role in avoiding analysis paralysis, where teams overthink constraints instead of shaping them.
👉 https://projifi.blog/overcoming-analysis-paralysis-leadership/
Example 3: When collaboration beats hard bargaining
Sometimes projects are simply too tight on budget.
In one such situation, certain machinery could not fit within the approved cost envelope. Procurement teams were hesitant to approach suppliers for alternatives or concessions, citing:
- Relationship sensitivities
- Fear of damaging long-term ties
I took a different approach.
I engaged the supplier directly and spoke openly:
- Explained the project’s financial reality
- Clarified that this was a strategic opportunity, not a squeeze
- Invited collaboration instead of confrontation
Because the relationship was honest and respectful, the supplier:
- Proposed alternative configurations
- Adjusted commercial terms
- Worked with us to fit the budget
The deal moved forward without compromising integrity on either side.
👉 Lesson:
Suppliers are partners, not adversaries—if you treat them as such.
Example 4: Blacklists, second chances, and leadership judgment
Procurement processes often include blacklisting suppliers based on past failures.
In several cases, I found that:
- The reasons for failure were poorly understood
- Context was missing
- Circumstances had changed
Instead of accepting blacklists blindly, I took proactive steps to:
- Understand why the supplier failed previously
- Separate systemic issues from one-off problems
- Assess whether risks were still relevant
When issues were found to be genuine but addressable, I have always been willing to offer a second chance—with clear expectations and safeguards.
Some of these suppliers later delivered reliably and competitively.
👉 Lesson:
Procedures provide guardrails. Leadership provides judgment.
What these examples have in common
Across all four situations, one pattern stands out:
Value was created not by procurement policy, but by leadership intervention.
The levers that mattered most were:
- Competition
- Timing
- Transparency
- Trust
- Context
These are not found in templates.
They are exercised by leaders who understand both commercial reality and execution pressure.
This is why trust-based leadership consistently outperforms rigid supervision in real project environments.
👉 https://projifi.blog/why-trust-really-beats-supervision-in-epc-projects/
Practitioner Insight
The most valuable procurement decisions I have been involved in were never made at the negotiation table. They were made weeks or months earlier — when someone chose to introduce a competitor, align a delivery schedule across projects, or pick up the phone and speak honestly with a supplier about a budget reality. Policy can set the boundaries. It cannot make those calls. In every case where procurement genuinely unlocked value, there was a leader willing to act beyond the template — with judgment, timing, and a clear understanding of what the project actually needed.
Procurement strategy is a leadership responsibility
Procurement cannot operate in isolation.
To maximise value and savings, leaders must:
- Involve procurement early
- Enable cross-project coordination
- Encourage supplier collaboration
- Apply judgment beyond rules
When procurement is reduced to compliance, value leaks quietly.
When it is treated as a strategic partner, savings compound.
Practical principles that actually work
From experience, these principles hold across project organisations:
- Introduce competition deliberately
- Use scheduling as a commercial lever
- Be transparent with suppliers
- Look beyond price to total value
- Question blacklists with context
- Reward long-term performance, not short-term optics
These principles apply equally to engineering projects, IT programs, and complex delivery environments.
Procurement decisions that go wrong often show up first as cost variance. Use the Project Risk vs Contingency Tool to track whether your procurement risks are being absorbed within contingency — or quietly eating into your project margin before anyone notices.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most common procurement mistake on capital projects?
In my experience, the most damaging mistake is reducing procurement to a price exercise. The lowest bidder wins the order — and then quietly costs the project far more through delays, quality failures, and commercial disputes. True procurement value is found in supplier capability, delivery reliability, and the quality of the commercial relationship — not the percentage saved at negotiation stage.
How do you break supplier dominance without damaging the project?
Deliberately and carefully. Introducing a credible alternative supplier requires investment upfront — understanding their technical capability, building the client’s confidence, and managing the transition without disrupting delivery. The goal is not disruption. It is competition. Once a dominant supplier knows an alternative exists, commercial terms improve without confrontation.
When does consolidation actually work in procurement?
When leaders are willing to look across projects rather than within them. The constraint is usually scheduling — teams assume delivery windows cannot align. In my experience, marginal schedule adjustments, made early enough, can unlock significant consolidation opportunities. The savings available through volume are almost always larger than what individual negotiations can achieve.
How should procurement handle supplier blacklists?
With judgment, not blind compliance. Blacklists exist for reasons — but those reasons are not always fully understood or still relevant. Before accepting a blacklist at face value, I always try to understand why the supplier failed, whether the circumstances have changed, and whether the risk is systemic or situational. Some of the most reliable suppliers I have worked with were given a second chance after a blacklist — with clear expectations and appropriate safeguards in place.
What does genuine procurement value look like beyond cost savings?
It looks like delivery certainty, reduced commercial risk, and supplier relationships that hold under pressure. A supplier who delivers on time, communicates problems early, and collaborates when budgets tighten is worth more than one who wins on price and underperforms on everything else. Procurement value is measured over the life of the project — not at the moment the purchase order is signed.
Why is procurement a leadership responsibility and not just a process?
Because the decisions that create real value — introducing competition, enabling consolidation, engaging suppliers transparently, exercising judgment on blacklists — cannot be made by policy alone. They require leaders who understand both commercial reality and execution pressure, and who are willing to intervene at the right moment. When procurement is reduced to compliance, value leaks quietly. When leaders engage with it strategically, savings compound.
Final thought
Procurement is not about squeezing suppliers.
It is about structuring decisions so value emerges naturally.
The best procurement outcomes I’ve seen were not driven by policy or pressure—but by:
- Courage to challenge dominance
- Willingness to collaborate
- Leadership judgment applied at the right moment
Savings follow when value is created first.
Explore more practitioner insights
For more experience-led perspectives on leadership, execution, and project decision-making, explore project leadership and execution insights on Projifi:
👉 https://projifi.blog/



