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Best Practices

5 tips for improving construction material procurement

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Construction workers in safety gear using a laptop at a building site

Summary

Effective material procurement is critical to construction project success, yet many contractors lack structured processes, leading to unnecessary costs from premium pricing, over-ordering, lengthy delivery times and poor cost tracking. Learn about 5 key strategies to optimize construction procurement with modern digital procurement technology to significantly reduce costs and increase project profitability.

Construction material procurement

In construction (residential, commercial, industrial), material procurement is crucial to building a successful project. The process, which includes several stakeholders, involves getting materials selected, ordered, invoiced, paid for and delivered to the site. The contractor's objectives in material procurement are to buy the best item at the right quality, quantity, time and cost. Today's continuing supply chain issues amplifies how crucial this process is for success.

Even with the known concerns, contractors might have little or no process or management system for material procurement. This can be problematic. As a result, these firms incur additional, but avoidable costs. Some of these costs are due to:

  • Paying a premium price for materials

  • Excess ordering of material

  • Significant delivery times for materials

  • Lack of tracking cost fluctuations for materials

Let's review common process aspects

  1. Consider procurement at the design stage

  2. Looking beyond the purchase price

  3. Project-specific pricing

  4. Staffing the procurement function

  5. Choosing the right software


Enjoy these tips for helping contractors improve material procurement which can save time and money on every project

1. Consider procurement at the design stage

Having great working relationships with suppliers is an essential requirement of any contractor, no matter your industry segment. Trust, fairness, mutual benefit and honesty are integral for building solid partnerships when selecting suppliers at the design stage. Reliability is another characteristic to consider; however, how do you track the performance of each supplier performance on every project? It would be best if you had the right tools to track each supplier's history, pricing and reliability.

Based on the situation and type of project, it might be beneficial to change the specification to mitigate potential risks with unknown suppliers, thus reducing costs in the process.

2. Look beyond the purchase price for materials

Successful material procurement is not just about securing the lowest price, but in fact, by getting the correct material spec at the right rate from the right supplier. Focusing on total cost shifts the unit cost to the entire cost of acquired materials or services. What this means is it's better to understand and consider all costs including, but not limited to reliability, availability, transportation, storage and disposable expenses. Looking beyond the price for materials and make decisions on total costs is an exercise worth researching. Read these construction materials industry statistics & facts.

3. Get agreement early with suppliers

Construction contractors (especially SMBs) relying on day-to-day ordering processes sometimes miss opportunities for procuring better rates on materials. At project starts, rates can be specific by required volumes and vary by amount, grouping and supplier. Applying an agreed rate on agreed volumes doesn't necessarily mean all the materials are delivered at once but can retain costs. In this case and all cases, incoming and outgoing invoices need to be monitored to ensure the correct rates are applied throughout the project.

4. Plan your procurement staffing responsibilities

The range of possible solutions for a successful procurement process are many, but most current processes are antiquated, relying on emails, text messages and using tracking spreadsheets. In addition, procurement managers often visit jobsites to confirm materials delivered. Depending on the contractor's size, some will choose to employ for this role, and others will spread the responsibility — either way, the proper structure needs to be in place at the company level and be followed by each.

An example of rules at the company level could involve:

  • Establishing project-specific material volume-discounts

  • Management approving all orders

  • For purchases over $1,000, 3 supplier quotes are required

Strategic thinking and a value-based approach to material procurement empower purchasing managers to unlock the potential savings on every project; however, due to the current manual and archaic workflows, construction firms of all sizes need the right technology — easy to set up, very little training and no IT resources to get the software up and running.

5. Select the right technology for you

Contractors cannot afford to maintain traditional ways while the construction industry makes dramatic efforts to improve productivity with purpose-built technology.

The right technology connects the field, office and suppliers to digitize material procurement workflows — replacing manual activities and improving the way contractors order, price, manage and track materials in one platform accessed via desktop and mobile apps. Innovative solutions like connected construction technology are already proving their worth in revolutionizing both field and office operations.

The introduction of digital purchasing and material management software and mobile apps offers easy-to-use tech that helps contractors improve construction materials management and increases profits without requiring IT resources or a task force to move forward.

By modernizing your approach, you can transform materials management into a competitive advantage and deliver better outcomes on every project. The software is available now, and you can get started today.

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