The Procurement Glossary » Open-Book Costing

Open-Book Costing

Sourcing & RFx

Definition

A pricing arrangement in which the supplier discloses its actual costs and agreed margin, so the buyer can see how the price is built up.

Explanation

Open-book costing is used in collaborative, long-term relationships to drive continuous cost improvement and build trust. Both parties can identify inefficiencies and share the resulting savings, aligning incentives around total cost rather than price alone.

Example

Under an open-book contract, the caterer shares ingredient invoices; when commodity prices fall, the buyer's price falls automatically.

Related terms

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Open-Book Costing?

A pricing arrangement in which the supplier discloses its actual costs and agreed margin, so the buyer can see how the price is built up. Open-book costing is used in collaborative, long-term relationships to drive continuous cost improvement and build trust. Both parties can identify inefficiencies and share the resulting savings, aligning incentives around total cost rather than price alone.

Can you give an example of Open-Book Costing?

Under an open-book contract, the caterer shares ingredient invoices; when commodity prices fall, the buyer's price falls automatically.

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