The Procurement Glossary » Procurement Strategy
Procurement Strategy
Strategy & Operations
Definition
A long-term plan that aligns procurement activity with organisational goals across categories, suppliers and processes.
Explanation
A procurement strategy sets priorities — cost, resilience, sustainability, innovation — and defines how sourcing, supplier management and operations will deliver them. It turns procurement from reactive buying into a deliberate contributor to business results.
Example
The procurement strategy prioritises supply resilience, so the team dual-sources every critical component.
Related terms
- Category Strategy — A plan for how a business will source and manage a specific spend category to maximise value and manage risk.
- Strategic Sourcing — A structured, data-driven approach to sourcing that aligns supplier selection with long-term business goals rather than one-off price hunting.
- Procurement Operating Model — The design of how procurement is organised — its structure, roles, processes and governance.
- Procurement Transformation — A structured programme to significantly improve procurement's people, process, technology and value delivery.
Related concepts
- Source-to-Pay (S2P) — The widest procurement cycle — sourcing and supplier selection on top of the operational procure-to-pay buying process.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is Procurement Strategy?
A long-term plan that aligns procurement activity with organisational goals across categories, suppliers and processes. A procurement strategy sets priorities — cost, resilience, sustainability, innovation — and defines how sourcing, supplier management and operations will deliver them. It turns procurement from reactive buying into a deliberate contributor to business results.
Can you give an example of Procurement Strategy?
The procurement strategy prioritises supply resilience, so the team dual-sources every critical component.
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