The Procurement Glossary » Centralized Procurement
Centralized Procurement
Strategy & Operations
Definition
An operating model in which a single central team controls purchasing decisions across the organisation.
Explanation
Centralisation concentrates spend and expertise, maximising leverage, standardisation and control. Its trade-off is reduced local flexibility and responsiveness, which is why many organisations adopt a centre-led hybrid instead.
Example
Centralized procurement negotiates one national contract instead of forty separate site deals.
Related terms
- Decentralized Procurement — An operating model in which individual business units or sites make their own purchasing decisions.
- Center-Led Procurement — A hybrid model where a central team sets strategy, contracts and standards while local units execute buying.
- Leverage — The relative bargaining power a buyer or supplier holds in a negotiation, driven by factors like volume, alternatives and switching cost.
- Consortium Purchasing — Buying jointly with other organisations to aggregate volume and secure better pricing and terms than any member could alone.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Centralized Procurement?
An operating model in which a single central team controls purchasing decisions across the organisation. Centralisation concentrates spend and expertise, maximising leverage, standardisation and control. Its trade-off is reduced local flexibility and responsiveness, which is why many organisations adopt a centre-led hybrid instead.
Can you give an example of Centralized Procurement?
Centralized procurement negotiates one national contract instead of forty separate site deals.
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