Indirect procurement remains a black box in many companies – characterized by high effort, little control, and hidden costs. Yet, it often holds significant savings potential. CFOs who analyze processes and structures can specifically uncover optimization opportunities and achieve lasting cost reductions.
In contrast to direct procurement (production materials, raw materials), indirect procurement encompasses all goods and services that do not directly contribute to value creation. Examples:
This area is particularly relevant for CFOs because it is often not the focus of strategic procurement, involves a high number of individual processes, and generates disproportionately high process costs relative to order value.
Studies show that indirect procurement accounts for over 20% of total purchasing volume in many companies – with significantly higher management costs per euro.
Anyone wanting to uncover potential savings should start with a structured analysis:
Typical quick wins:
Key figures include processing costs per order, number of creditors per category, and the share of maverick buying.
| Measure | Effect |
|---|---|
| Reduce creditors | Less effort in accounting & auditing |
| Standardizing processes | Fewer questions, clearer processes |
| Introduce approval workflows | Avoiding uncontrolled spending |
| Use purchasing service providers | Save time, increase efficiency |
Especially for orders below €1,000, FACURA processing is significantly more cost-efficient than internal handling – while maintaining full control for CFO teams.
CFOs who consistently analyze indirect procurement often quickly identify significant savings potential. The key lies in:
FACURA provides support precisely at this point – without system disruption or lengthy project durations. This makes indirect procurement predictable, cost-efficient, and controllable.