Category Archives: Services

The Unique Challenges of Travel Procurement

Travel procurement is challenging because it is services-oriented procurement. Services-oriented procurement is challenging because it:

  • is Calendar-based
  • is Time-critical
  • requires Confirmations and updates
  • revolves around Real-time inventory
  • is Dynamically Priced
  • is often Group-Oriented

Travel procurement is even more of a challenge because:

  • Travelers have limited flexibility and the need for frequent changes
  • Employee expectations are continually rising
  • Low adoption of current solutions
  • Maverick spend runs rampant
  • Forced usage of sub-standard tools meets with employee resistance
  • Training costs and burden associated with current tools
  • Increasing fragmentation of the marketplace
  • Current solutions take a silo-approach
  • Agencies, first-generation travel tools, and on-line consumer booking tools all have their limitations

So what can you do? Check back this afternoon!

The Sourcing Innovation Series: Part XII

Yesterday we were treated to some insightful commentary from John Martin of Building SaaS on the Future of Services Sourcing. I must admit that this was not an area I had thought much about before I started the series, but after John’s post and doing some research on Rearden Commerce’s (Deem since 2012) site, I am convinced that services sourcing is going to become a major part of your future sourcing initiatives internally and externally.

After all, with services spending increasing twice as fast as that on indirect goods, with most organizations paying 10-35% more than their negotiated rates for services due to non-compliance and maverick spending (as per a recent Aberdeen study), and with a 10-20% savings potential in the first year alone with the adoption of an on-demand web services platform, your services spending can not be ignored, especially if you are a large organization.

The question is, how do you approach your services spend today in a single, holistic fashion when there does not appear to be a single platform or framework for attacking your broad range of service categories such as T&E, telecommunications, printing, and consulting needs?

I think the answer is a combination of extensible and integrateable on-demand platforms built on services oriented architectures (SOAs) and procurement outsourcing for those categories that you cannot manage effectively in house. For example, you might use a platform like Rearden Commerce for your T&E expenses, a platform like Iasta (acquired by Selectica, merged with b-Pack, renamed Determine, acquired by Corcentric) for managing your local indirect consulting and advertising spend (since there are similarities between services and indirect goods), and an outsourcing services provider like or Provade (acquired by Smart ERP Solutions) to manage your corporate services, telecommunications, customer service, and consulting spend.

In the future, I think you’ll see strong integration between web-enabled on-demand SOA platforms and procurement outsource providers which will give you access to both their services and the services of an on-demand platform that can be used by each and every employee in your organization to manage all aspects of your organization’s services spend. Any differing thoughts?

The Sourcing Innovation Series: Part XI

Today I’d like to welcome guest contributor John Martin of Building SaaS to Sourcing Innovation with a guest post on The Future of Sourcing … for Services. If you followed the On-Demand series, you might remember that I discussed his article “How True Software-as-a-service Delivers More Value” extensively in the fourth installment of my On Demand series.

Our focus is on purchased services: consulting services, contingent labor, outsourcing services, field services, legal services, etc. What we’ve found, in providing our Services Procurement solution to dozens of Fortune 500 companies, is that companies gain the best results by managing the entire end-to-end lifecycle of purchased services.

The primary characteristic of service categories is that they are all different. However, I’ll mention a few commonalities about managing purchased services, then suggest a few ways we’re seeing our leading-edge customers manage and optimize services spending.

First, here are some generalized characteristics about purchased services:

Services spending is growing: With the increases in business process outsourcing and focus on core competencies, services spending is increasing twice as fast as that on indirect goods spending, according to CAPS Research. Economically, the prices of services are also inherently inflationary since they are closely tied to labor costs, which increase over time faster than goods costs, on average – the Federal Bank of New York’s analysis shows that services’ inflation rate has stayed consistently 2.6% over that of goods over the last three decades.

Core PCE Goods and Core PCE Services Inflation 1968:1-2002:4

Services spending is often difficult to manage centrally: For some services categories such as marketing services and legal services, functional executives “own” the supplier relationships and spending. For others such as contingent workers and facilities management services, the sourcing and purchasing activities are dispersed throughout the enterprise.

There can be many unknowns at sourcing time: Some services such as contingent workers and print services have unique requisitions every time, so up-front pricing is difficult to establish. In other cases, the needs of the enterprise change more quickly than anticipated at sourcing time, which has led many multi-year outsourcing engagements to fail.

Services spending involves a lot of uniqueness: every contract is unique with terms in the statement of work text, requisitions are often unique, services deliverables are different for every contract, and the quality and acceptance measures differ by category, contract, and deliverable.

“Value delivered” is often a key concept for purchased services: When a services provider touches your customers directly (such as call-center outsourcing or field installation services) or can positively impact your business results (IT application development services, marketing services), the potential value of those services becomes a multi-dimensional concept (including multiple flavors of “quality”) to continuously measure and improve.

Finally, services involve many additional risks: When a supplier’s workers come onsite to deliver the services, now there are risks to manage regarding security, safety, confidentiality, etc. For contingent workers, there are HR-related risks such as co-employment and worker classification, as well as tracking the results of prior work performed by the worker.

As a result of these characteristics of purchased services, sourcing becomes an ongoing process rather than an event. For example, in some categories such as contingent workforce and print, the sourcing event creates the marketplace of preferred suppliers, and each requisition is sent out to the suppliers for bid – sourcing at procurement time. For almost all services categories, the delivery phase produces information that allows better sourcing and contract negotiating in the next sourcing phase.

After managing this iterative process for a few years, it’s almost impossible to continue to improve the cost basis of services through sourcing, at least since wage pricing started firming up a couple of years ago.

So we’re seeing companies turn to other ways to improve services sourcing, as hints to the future of sourcing. Extending Eric Strovink’s compliance comments and Tim Minahan’s “frontline sourcing” concept (explained over on Supply Excellence [WayBackMachine]), here are some trends that we see improving services sourcing going forward:

Link sourcing with procure-to-pay and spend analysis: Some would say that for services, contract execution and compliance are everything. The cost savings and value from contracted deliverables are on paper after sourcing, but are actually captured only through a tightly coupled procure-to-pay program. Then, spend analysis on the detailed requisition, deliverable and invoice activities allows improved re-sourcing the next time, in a cyclical sourcing-improvement process.

Actively use learning strategies throughout the cycle to improve sourcing: Since services have many unknowns at sourcing time, and much of the services value is determined during the delivery phase, companies are engineering their supplier relationships and processes to maximize learning. For example, multi-sourcing sets up a competition among service providers, and spending can be directed to the better-performing suppliers. Companies are starting to track every touch-point with a supplier, gathering qualitative information through surveys to gain much more insight into value and transaction costs. Service-level metrics are becoming much more detailed and continuously monitored (with direct data feeds from the services supplier) to gain insight into the supplier’s processes and capabilities that underlie their delivered quality and value.

Manage and shape demand: The demand drivers for many services are fragmented and hard to pin down – definitely not available in a production forecast. Since service prices tend to rise over time, it pays to focus on controlling costs through internal demand management, rather than just increasing pressure on suppliers each year. Demand for services is also malleable, as which tasks performed internally versus by the supplier can be changed if needed. Investigating internal demand drivers and supplier interaction processes can lead to ways to reduce time and costs by shifting activities to/from the supplier, redrawing the process boundaries, and eliminating non-value-add tasks performed by either party.

Build tighter linkages into suppliers’ systems: In the direct goods world, linking into the suppliers’ inventory, logistics, and production systems is a now-common practice. In services, however, this is much less prevalent. In addition to pulling service-level metrics from the supplier (such as call and incident tracking information for call-center outsourcers), companies are adding system integrations for requisitions, deliverables, and invoices to greatly reduce transaction costs and eliminate the “echo-chamber” interaction costs of haggling over invoices post-delivery. Going forward, there is emerging interest in linking into suppliers’ availability, skill capability, and project tracking systems to better optimize delivery processes, and a desire for better collaboration tools throughout the lifecycle of interactions with the supplier.

Invest more in supplier discovery and development: Most large companies have too many services supplier relationships, so supplier consolidation is the first effort. However, in order to keep up with the state-of-the-art in purchased services, we see a need to provide better tools for finding and starting up relationships with high-quality emerging services suppliers. Along the same lines, companies will need to more proactively develop niche and high-performing services suppliers in the upcoming years.

Thanks again to John Martin for this insightful post on The Future of Sourcing … Services.

Sourcing Innovation Prices for Fixed Offerings

Last Updated: December 3, 2025

The majority of fixed-work projects are priced on a project-by-project basis and consulting engagements are priced on a project or daily basis, but on this page you can find standard price ranges for typical standard projects. These will be discounted if you contract for multiple deliverables.

All Prices are USD.
Prices are valid through December 31, 2026 unless otherwise noted.

INDEX

Reprints (Two-Year) / Vendor Coverage

  • single module: $3,000
  • mini-suite (up to 3 modules): $5,000
  • full-suite (up to 6 modules): $7,500
  • 30% discount on current pricing for an update within 1.5 years of the last reprint
  • 20% discount on current pricing for an update within 2.5 years of the last reprint

See the FAQ on why you should get coverage.

Due in full up-front. Non-refundable.

Standard White-Papers and E-Books

See the public offerings on the FAQ for more details.

  • Illuminations: $10,000 single sponsor
  • Inspiration: $ 5,000 single sponsor
  • Joint White-Paper: contact, typically between $500 to $1,000 per page
  • e-Book: contact: $25,000 to $75,000 (novella length to full e-book length)

50% non-refundable deposit due in full up front. Remainder due on delivery.

Event Attendance

See the event coverage and event speaking on the FAQ.

Fees depend on the following:

  • Client/Sponsor vs. Non-Client/Non-Sponsor
  • For-Profit (Vendor/Services Company/Event Organizer) vs. Non-Profit
  • Education vs. Demonstration (with the intent to sell)
  • Preparation vs. No Preparation Required

The rules are:

  • Clients/Blog Sponsors (should sponsorships ever resume) with mid-to-long term commitments get reduced rates
  • Non-Profits, focussed on education, get reduced rates (but reduced likelihood of attendance due to time limitations)
  • (Lead) speaking slots, panel moderation, or engagements that require (considerable) up-front preparation cost more

That being said, here is sample pricing for some typical engagements and if you have something specific, you can contact to discuss.

  • for-profit event, attendance and coverage: $5,000 + $2,500 for each additional day + expenses
    you get: free sidebar advertisement on SI, one dedicated announcement/attendance post, one overall review/commentary article, one article per day on covered subject matter of your choice, and you can schedule the doctor to attend key customer sessions, dinners, etc. where his presence will be beneficial to you — that’s a minimum of 3 articles plus dedicated customer advisory time
  • non-profit educational event, attendance and coverage: expenses only if in Canada, expenses + $2,500 if in North America or Europe
    you get: one announcement article, and one coverage article, limited attendee engagement (unless you pay a speaker fee)
  • for profit event, attendance and speaking: $10,000 + expenses
    you get: free sidebar advertisement on SI, one dedicated announcement/attendance post, one reminder post (that will mention what the doctor is speaking on and why they should attend), and one coverage post; additional coverage or days beyond the speaking day will be extra

Base Fee due up front. Additional (day) fees and expenses due with 15 days of expense submission. Publication of articles may be delayed until all fees paid in full. Attendance fees are non-refundable unless the doctor doesn’t show for reasons within his control.

Event Advertising

Animated Ad on Sidebar. See FAQ for details. Pricing valid through June 30, 2026.

  • $75/week
  • $250/month
  • $500/quarter

Due in full up front.

Other Projects and Services

Including, but not limited to the private label offerings, Sourcing Innovation offers services for:

Solution Providers / Private Equity Firms

  • Total Solution Assessment
  • Technology Roadmap Assessment
  • Technology and Product Diligence
  • (Product) Marketing Strategy
  • (Product) Marketing Support

Buying Organizations

  • Needs Assessment
  • Tech/Solution RFX (Process) Preparation (and Demo Script)
  • (Vendor) Solution Assessment
  • Train the Trainer

Specialists

  • Architectural Services
  • Modelling Services
  • Analytics and Optimization Services

These are all quoted on a project-by-project basis. Please contact for details.

Fee schedules:

  • single deliverable project: 50% non-refundable fee due up front
  • multi-stage project: 25% non-refundable free due up front, other fees due on contract milestones
  • monthly contract: non-refundable minimum fee for each month due up front on the 1st of the month

Day Rate

Based on what Gartner charges for top analysts in Source-to-Pay and Supply Chain (and that the doctor now has more experience than anyone they have left) …

And based upon what the Big X Consultancies charge for their top experts, and the fact that the doctor has more technical knowledge than just about anyone they have (both in terms of technology education and experience and actual knowledge about hundreds of source-to-pay solutions) …

the doctor should be charging you at least $10,000 USD a day like they do!

But he doesn’t. And he won’t because he wants:

  • smaller vendors with an honest desire to grow and help customers to be able to afford expert services,
  • emerging due diligence providers to be able to provide valuable offerings in the five and low six figures, not the high six and low seven figures the big firms charge to send a team of juniors in, and
  • mid-market companies to be able to select the right right (low) six figure technology for them on a five figure consulting budget

But it won’t be rock bottom rate either. the doctor knows what he is worth, knows how efficient he is, and knows what his operating costs are, and also knows how much you’ll pay if you go somewhere else to contract for someone of his skills.

To engage the doctor, you’ll pay, again depending on:

  • for-profit vs. non-profit
    (but non-profit engagements are limited)
  • project type
  • project duration

between $1,500 and $5,000 USD a day. And that might sound like a big range, but it adequately reflects the difference in cost, and effort, between an off-site research project done on the doctor‘s time in his office in normal 8-hour work days vs. an on-site due-diligence for a PE firm that wants to analyze a complex mini-suite in two-weeks and needs a former CTO (who has done every job in a tech department) to do it, and, more specifically, a former CTO who can work 16 hour days for two weeks straight to get it done! A day isn’t a day, and you’ll be charged appropriately based on the day and the commitment you make.

So, sorry, there’s no fixed day rate. Just a commitment to you to keep your project as cost-effective as possible to maximize your ROI. Please contact for details.

Sponsorships

Should they reopen, see the information on the Sponsorship Information Page.