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What is category management? A comprehensive guide.

Category management is an approach to procurement where similar products and services are grouped into categories—to consolidate expenditure and maximise savings.

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With constant fluctuation in global supply markets—and rapidly changing business requirements—procurement has become incredibly complex. Companies need a better way to proactively manage their supply base and optimise their purchasing spend. This is where category management excels—and why it has become a vital best practice for so many businesses today.

Category management definition

Category management is the process of procuring goods and services by grouping them into categories based on similar characteristics—such as type, value, supplier, risk, location, or department. This process makes it easier to understand and control the total cost of ownership for each category, and to maximise savings and value for each purchase. With category management, companies can also streamline the procurement process, strengthen supplier relationships, improve spend analysis, mitigate risk, and more.

The evolution of category management

Category management was developed in the 1980s and has historically been a manual endeavour, with disconnected and time-consuming steps carried out in isolated spreadsheets, documents, and presentations. The time spent manually collecting data—and analysing and reporting on it—meant procurement teams had less time to spend on strategy and value realisation.

Fast-forward to today: software for category management can automate and speed up many of the steps in this process. It helps category managers analyse large quantities of data and streamline the development, execution, and monitoring of category strategies—so they can become far more efficient and strategic in their day-to-day tasks. Modern solutions offer category insights, process guidance, templates, AI-powered recommendations, and more to help managers meet, and often exceed, their spend management goals.

Category management vs. strategic sourcing

The terms category management and strategic sourcing are sometimes used interchangeably, but they are not the same thing. Strategic sourcing is a procurement process focused on selecting the right suppliers and negotiating the best prices to meet short-term organisational goals. The primary objective of strategic sourcing is cost reduction. Category management, on the other hand, segments purchases into categories to help managers identify opportunities to save money and improve quality, supplier performance, and efficiency. Category management is a continuous process carried out over the long term, and often includes strategic sourcing as an early step.

Top 6 benefits of category management

Thanks in part to fewer redundancies and simpler supplier negotiations, category-led procurement offers a host of distinct advantages that can help purchasing teams run a tighter ship and identify new opportunities:

  1. Improved insights. With categorised spend and a single point of contact for all related suppliers, companies can gain greater insight into costs, supplier performance, and potential supply chain issues. Additionally, thorough knowledge of contracts, prices, and market trends can be utilised to make better, more profitable procurement decisions.
  2. Increased savings. Drawing on their category expertise and insights made possible through categorisation, managers can negotiate better prices and improve performance to reduce costs. And since managers are buying for the long term, they can take advantage of economies of scale to further save money.
  3. Reduced risk exposure. With an in-depth understanding of each supplier and effective longer-term working relationships, category teams can take a more proactive approach to supplier management and reduce the risk of dealing with unknown or fly-by-night suppliers.
  4. Greater procurement efficiency. With time-tested, digitalised, and automated processes, teams can respond more quickly to market changes and free up time for value-added activities.
  5. Better adherence to ESG and SR commitments. Category goal alignment, transparency, and monitoring make it easier for companies to adhere to environmental and social responsibility commitments.
  6. Increased spend under management. Through intelligent automation, procurement can manage a greater number of categories and ultimately increase spend under management.

Types of procurement categories

Category groupings can vary from business to business depending on their industry, spending policies, and particular market. Generally, each procurement category consists of a group of products or services that have similar characteristics—such as type, supplier, value, location, or department. HR, technology, maintenance, and travel, for example, are common categories.

It’s also common to split direct and indirect spend into their own categories. Direct spend is for items required for core business products and services, such as raw materials and packaging supplies. In contrast, indirect spend refers to goods and services that support day-to-day business operations, such as office supplies. Grouping indirect spend, which is often managed in silos across the business, can help standardise and lower indirect purchasing costs.

Some companies turn to a global standard such as the United Nations Standard Products and Services Code (UNSPSC) for guidance to determine their categories, but most will create their own internal spend taxonomy. Regardless of the exact composition of categories, successful category management involves applying a standard framework for segmenting the goods and services required to run a business.

3 key steps in the category management process

Though the process can vary across organisations, category management typically includes three steps:

  1. Define category profiles. To begin, teams analyse current spend and weigh a range of factors—from risk and regulations to straightforward business logic—to identify categories. The result is a consolidated category taxonomy for purchasing that can be used across the organisation.
  2. Outline and plan strategy. In this step, teams assess their categories based on pricing, supplier performance, supply and demand forecasts, and other factors—and identify opportunities to optimise spend and increase value. Based on this information, they create a master strategy to achieve each category’s goals, broken down into specific tactics and phases.
  3. Implement strategy and monitor outcomes. Finally, the strategy is implemented and outcomes, suppliers, business needs, and markets are continuously monitored—so teams can respond swiftly to change and optimise category strategies as required.

What to look for in category management software

Category management software is designed to centralise, digitalise, and streamline processes for all category strategies—and to provide actionable insights to refine and improve them. To achieve this, the best solutions include the following capabilities at a minimum:

Best practices for an effective category management strategy

Developing a successful category strategy can be achieved more quickly by following these best practices:

Resources

Insight-driven category management

Discover what is driving companies towards a more strategic approach to category management, and how SAP can assist, in this Hackett Group report.

Download the report