In today’s context of global trade dynamics, regulatory changes, and supply chain disruptions, businesses need to rethink how they select and manage suppliers more than ever before. According to the latest guide from Amazon Business, strategic sourcing has become a core element of enterprise procurement decision-making, impacting not only cost control but also directly influencing organizational resilience and sustainable development capabilities.
“Sourcing is where organizations take control of procurement decision-making. When procurement teams shift from reacting to individual requests to actively shaping supplier relationships, contract terms, and category strategies, they unlock measurable impact on cost, risk, and socially responsible purchasing performance across the enterprise.”
What is Sourcing in Procurement?
Sourcing is the structured process of identifying, evaluating, and selecting potential suppliers to secure the goods and services an organization needs on terms that work for the business. It creates the foundation that guides purchasing teams and end users as they make day-to-day buying decisions. The sourcing process typically includes: analyzing spend patterns, understanding internal stakeholder needs, researching and qualifying available suppliers, negotiating favorable contracts, and establishing how those agreements will be used across the organization.
Differences Between Sourcing, Purchasing, and Strategic Sourcing
Sourcing, purchasing, and strategic sourcing sit on the same continuum but play distinct roles in spend management: purchasing is execution—the day-to-day work of raising requisitions, issuing purchase orders, processing invoices, and resolving delivery issues; sourcing is the upstream work that makes purchasing faster and more controlled, including identifying suppliers, assessing capabilities, negotiating terms, and establishing agreements; strategic sourcing takes a broader view, treating each category as a portfolio to be optimized over time, weighing total cost of ownership against supplier performance, risk exposure, and evolving business objectives.
The Three-Phase Strategic Sourcing Process
Strategic sourcing provides a repeatable framework for moving from “we need to buy this” to “we have the right suppliers in place with clear performance expectations.” Most enterprise teams follow a three-phase model: define category strategy, run the sourcing event, then award and implement the contract.
Phase 1 is defining the category strategy. Before approaching the market, organizations need a clear view of what they’re buying, how they’re buying it today, and what’s changing. A category strategy sets direction for a defined group of goods or services—such as IT hardware, lab supplies, and facilities services—and becomes the foundation for every decision that follows.
Phase 2 is running the sourcing event. Depending on the category, organizations might issue a request for information (RFI), request for quote (RFQ), request for proposal (RFP), or run an e-auction. The goal is to be explicit about what they’re trying to learn and how they’ll make decisions.
Phase 3 is award, contract, and implementation. This phase starts by closing the loop: confirming selection with the winning supplier, aligning on key commercial points, and communicating next steps to foster strong partnerships.
Supplier Evaluation and Sourcing Risk Management
Supplier evaluation is where organizations balance cost with capability, reliability, and compliance. A structured approach helps compare suppliers fairly and avoid over-fixating on the lowest price alone. Risk management is built into evaluation from the start—geopolitical shifts are pushing companies to rethink global sourcing and geographic concentration, making supplier risk assessment a core part of selection rather than an afterthought.
According to a 2025 Chief Procurement Officer survey, 78% of procurement leaders felt last year’s market was just as unpredictable—or worse—than the year prior, increasing external challenges and causing strategies like local sourcing and automation to grow in popularity. Beyond geographic location, when evaluating suppliers, consider these dimensions: financial resilience, operational maturity, compliance and ethics, and upstream transparency.
How to Choose Sourcing Software Solutions
The right sourcing software should fit how teams actually work, not force organizations into rigid workflows that slow down decisions. When looking for options, consider these essential features: evaluate integration capabilities, analyze flexibility, consider user experience, assess ease of use, and prioritize scalability.
How to Measure Sourcing Success
Measurement turns sourcing from a project into a performance discipline. It shows leadership where value is being created and reveals what needs refinement. The most effective key performance indicators (KPIs) connect category-level results directly to enterprise goals around cost, risk, and socially responsible purchasing. Useful sourcing KPIs include: cost savings and avoidance, supplier performance, contract compliance, sourcing cycle time, and supplier diversity and SRP spend.
Source: business.amazon.com
This article was AI-assisted and reviewed by our editorial team.










