Enterprise Procurement Concepts, Explained » Supplier Management » Supplier Relationship Management (SRM)
Supplier Relationship Management (SRM), Explained
· 7 min read
Supplier relationship management (SRM) is the systematic practice of assessing, segmenting and developing an organisation's suppliers to maximise the value each relationship delivers. It focuses effort on strategic suppliers through joint planning, performance reviews and collaboration, turning transactional buying into long-term partnerships that reduce risk and unlock innovation.
What is supplier relationship management?
Supplier relationship management (SRM) is the discipline of managing an organisation's interactions with its suppliers as a coordinated portfolio rather than a series of one-off transactions. It segments the supply base by value and criticality, then applies the right level of governance, collaboration and investment to each tier.
SRM is where procurement moves from buying to partnering. For the small number of strategic suppliers that drive most value, it establishes joint objectives, regular business reviews and structured improvement — while lower-value relationships are managed efficiently and at arm's length.
Who is supplier relationship management for?
SRM is for organisations whose performance depends materially on a handful of key suppliers — for critical materials, specialist services or high-spend categories. Category and procurement managers lead it, working with the internal stakeholders who use each supplier and with the supplier's own account and delivery teams.
It matters most where switching suppliers is hard or costly, so the return comes from making existing relationships work harder rather than constantly re-tendering.
Why supplier relationship management matters
Without SRM, all suppliers are treated the same and attention flows to whoever is loudest or most problematic. Strategic suppliers get no more focus than commodity vendors, opportunities for joint improvement and innovation go unrealised, and risk in critical relationships is discovered too late.
A structured SRM programme concentrates effort where it pays off. By segmenting suppliers and running disciplined reviews with the important ones, organisations secure better commercial terms, faster problem resolution, early access to innovation and greater supply resilience — value that competitive tendering alone cannot deliver.
How it works
1. Segment the supply base
Suppliers are classified by spend, criticality and strategic value into tiers — for example strategic, preferred and transactional. Segmentation decides how much governance, collaboration and management time each supplier warrants, so scarce resource is directed to the relationships that matter most.
2. Define governance and joint objectives
For key suppliers, the organisation agrees a governance model — review cadence, scorecards, escalation paths and shared goals covering cost, quality, service and innovation. This turns a loose relationship into a managed one with mutual accountability.
3. Review, develop and improve
Regular business reviews track performance against the agreed objectives, surface issues and identify improvement and innovation opportunities. The relationship is actively developed over time, with feedback flowing both ways so value grows across the contract's life.
Benefits
- Effort focused on the strategic suppliers that drive the most value and risk.
- Stronger commercial terms and priority treatment earned through partnership.
- Earlier access to supplier innovation, capacity and new capabilities.
- Faster issue resolution through established governance and clear points of contact.
- Greater supply resilience by deepening and de-risking critical relationships.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between SRM and supplier performance management?
Supplier performance management measures how well a supplier delivers against agreed metrics such as quality, delivery and service. SRM is broader: it uses that performance data alongside segmentation, governance and collaboration to develop the relationship strategically, especially for the organisation's most important suppliers.
Should every supplier be managed with SRM?
No. The point of SRM is to segment the supply base and invest management effort proportionately. Strategic suppliers receive intensive collaboration and governance, while the many transactional suppliers are managed efficiently and at arm's length to avoid wasting resource.
What makes a supplier strategic?
A supplier is strategic when it is hard to replace and material to the business — because of high spend, critical supply, specialist capability, or a role in innovation. These characteristics justify the deeper investment of time and governance that SRM directs toward top-tier relationships.
How Lapasar Mall supplier management delivers this
Lapasar Mall manages ongoing supplier relationships with a vendor portal, client–vendor chat and vendor scorecards to keep communication and performance in one place.
- Vendor portal (PWA) with push notifications
- Client–vendor chat
- Vendor scorecards
- Supplier onboarding pipeline
- Vendor attribution and auto POs
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Related concepts
- Supplier Management — Onboarding, qualifying, evaluating and governing the suppliers a business relies on — turning a scattered vendor list into a managed supply base.
- Supplier Performance Management — The ongoing measurement of suppliers against defined metrics — quality, delivery, cost and service — to drive accountability and continuous improvement.
- Supplier Onboarding — The structured process of registering, verifying and activating a new supplier so it can be transacted with quickly, compliantly and safely.
- Contract Management — The end-to-end management of supplier contracts — from drafting and negotiation through execution, compliance monitoring and renewal — to capture agreed value and control risk.
More in Supplier Management
- Supplier Onboarding
- Supplier Performance Management
- Vendor Risk Management
- Supplier Consolidation
- Supplier Qualification
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