The Procurement Glossary » Demand Aggregation
Demand Aggregation
Strategy & Operations
Definition
Combining requirements from multiple buyers, sites or periods to purchase in larger, more economical volumes.
Explanation
Aggregating demand increases leverage, unlocks volume discounts and reduces transaction and delivery costs. It requires visibility of dispersed needs and coordination to time purchases together — a core reason organisations centralise or run group buying.
Example
Demand aggregation combines every site's uniform order into one annual contract at a lower unit price.
Related terms
- Consortium Purchasing — Buying jointly with other organisations to aggregate volume and secure better pricing and terms than any member could alone.
- Group Purchasing Organization (GPO) — An entity that aggregates the purchasing volume of many members to negotiate discounts with suppliers on their behalf.
- Leverage — The relative bargaining power a buyer or supplier holds in a negotiation, driven by factors like volume, alternatives and switching cost.
- Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) — The order quantity that minimises total inventory cost by balancing ordering cost against holding cost.
Related concepts
- Spend Analytics — Turning raw procurement transaction data into a clear, categorised picture of what an organisation buys, from whom, and where the savings are.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Demand Aggregation?
Combining requirements from multiple buyers, sites or periods to purchase in larger, more economical volumes. Aggregating demand increases leverage, unlocks volume discounts and reduces transaction and delivery costs. It requires visibility of dispersed needs and coordination to time purchases together — a core reason organisations centralise or run group buying.
Can you give an example of Demand Aggregation?
Demand aggregation combines every site's uniform order into one annual contract at a lower unit price.
Back to the procurement glossary | Procurement concepts | Contact us