Why Most Procurement Decisions Fail?
- Procurement Is About Risk Allocation - Supplier Evaluation Is Underdeveloped
By Rich Bee ·April 27, 2026 · 2 min read
It's not about price.
In project-based work, procurement usually gets treated as a way to cut costs. That framing is where the trouble starts.
Decades of research, including a structured literature review published in the International Journal of Project Management, point to something different. Procurement performance rests on two distinct stages: supplier selection and supplier evaluation.
- Supplier selection
- Supplier evaluation
Most organizations pour time into the first stage. Very few build a structured system for the second, and that gap is where hidden risk accumulates.
Procurement Is Risk Allocation, Not a Transaction
When you pick suppliers for project environments such as construction, engineering, or technical manufacturing, price alone can't carry the decision. The research keeps surfacing five evaluation dimensions that matter more than the quote.
Cost, beyond the quote. Real cost includes lifecycle implications, delay risk, change orders, and the price of quality failures.
Quality and reliability. Not just defect rate, but compliance, consistency, and technical robustness.
Delivery and time sensitivity. Project schedules are interdependent. One supplier slipping can move the whole critical path.
Technical capability. Engineering depth, production maturity, and innovation capacity. Good suppliers often act as technical partners, not just vendors.
Managerial maturity. Communication, coordination, and planning discipline. Plenty of project failures trace back to weak management rather than weak products.
The Research Gap: Evaluation Stays Underdeveloped
One finding stands out across the literature: supplier performance monitoring gets far less attention than supplier selection.
In practice, that looks like a one-way street.
Select → Contract → Execute → Hope for the best
Procurement should run as a feedback loop instead.
Select → Monitor → Evaluate → Improve → Re-select
Organizations that never build structured evaluation tend to hit the same project risks over and over.
What This Means for Companies Sourcing Globally
Source from international markets, especially newer manufacturing bases, and a structured evaluation framework matters even more. Price transparency is easy to get. Capability transparency is not.
The edge today isn't squeezing out a lower price. It's reducing uncertainty. Procurement has stopped being purely operational; it's strategic risk management.
Put this into practice
Have a supplier or product in mind?
Tell our advisor what you are sourcing and the supplier you are eyeing. We will flag the basics — license, trade history, obvious risk — at no cost and with no sales follow-up.