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The Blueprint for Effective Vendor Contract Management

Barbara Cook
By Barbara Cook
Barbara Cook

Barbara Cook

Barbara is a financial writer for Tipalti and other successful B2B businesses, including SaaS and financial companies. She is a former CFO for fast-growing tech companies with Deloitte audit experience. Barbara has an MBA from The University of Texas and an active CPA license. When she’s not writing, Barbara likes to research public companies and play Pickleball, Texas Hold ‘em poker, bridge, and Mah Jongg.

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Updated October 12, 2024
Procurement
Supplier Management
Vendor Onboarding
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Vendor contract management has become increasingly important in recent years. Why? Businesses today are more geared towards outsourcing. Budgets always include space for a wide variety of third-party vendors, ranging from professional service providers like consultants and marketing firms to suppliers of the raw materials used for manufacturing.

These transactions naturally require contracts to navigate the complexity of B2B commerce. However, with so many suppliers and partnerships to work with, it can be easy to lose track of all your contracts, hence the need for a robust approach to vendor contract management.

Studies have shown that businesses in many industries have over 90% of their annual revenue in supplier contracts. Managing vendor contracts properly with continuous improvement cannot be understated.

What Is Vendor Contract Management?

Vendor contract management is managing vendor contracts from contract creation through execution and contract renewal, with ongoing analysis to ensure proper vendor performance and cost optimization. It applies to implementing contract lifecycle management. 

B2B transactions are a lot more complicated than the ones we’re used to in a store. Rather than a simple exchange of funds and a receipt, purchases made between corporations require a formal business contract to lay out the terms and conditions of the agreement.

This vendor agreement, a vendor contract, is a vital document for both sides. The seller uses it to verify revenue and sales, while the buyer saves a copy to keep track of spending and monitor contract performance. Both use it to spell out how the two parties will work together, their obligations, and any severance terms in case one side fails to hold up its side of the deal. 

If changes are needed and mutually agreed upon, amendments may be issued after the original vendor or supplier contract. Some supplier contracts have SLAs, which are service-level agreements. 

According to CIO magazine:

A service-level agreement (SLA) defines the level of service expected from a vendor, laying out metrics by which service is measured, as well as remedies should service levels not be achieved. It is a critical component of any technology vendor contract.

A vendor contract is more than just an invoice, as it covers multiple aspects of the buyer-seller interaction in the supply chain. For example, imagine you’re purchasing new desks and chairs for a new office space. On the contract, you would specify the color, size, and type of furniture you need and the delivery timeframe. If anything gets damaged during transit, extra details will be provided regarding the payment terms, delivery instructions, and return policy.

Types of Vendor Contracts

Contracts can vary in format depending on the nature of the transaction, the needs of the buyer, and the industry.

  • Fixed price: Low-risk transactions with trusted vendors usually run on fixed-price contracts. These are ideal for products and services that aren’t impacted significantly by market fluctuations.
  • Cash reimbursable: In addition to the purchase price, the buyer agrees to pay for any additional work associated with fulfilling the contract. This option is ideal for more risky or uncertain transactions.
  • Hourly rate: If you’re purchasing professional services like consulting or freelance contracting, an hourly rate and time frame will likely be agreed upon.
  • Indefinite: In any case where the quantity of the goods or the duration of the service is unknown, an indefinite contract will be made to specify a range of minimum and maximum delivery terms. You might see these contracts when no specific deliverables are known.

There are likely other specialized forms of contracts as well, but these are the ones you’re most likely to discover.

How Vendor Contract Management Works

Vendor contract management is writing up, negotiating, and finalizing vendor contracts. It examines every aspect of supplier agreements, such as how the documents are stored and tracked, who can sign and verify purchases, and any key provisions that must be included. Using automation to the extent possible is essential for achieving excellent vendor contract management. 

It aims to address a few main areas:

  • Mitigating vendor risk associated with the purchase through examination of agreement terms and effective contract negotiation
  • Keeping track of the accounting for contract data, whether it’s a deposit or a withdrawal from the company books
  • Fostering healthy business relationships between suppliers and buyers, such as when to renew a recurring vendor contract
  • Streamlining contract life cycle management (CLM) for more efficient procurement operations through automation
  • Creating a centralized repository of digitized contract documents

It’s often the responsibility of either the procurement or finance teams, though the legal department may get involved as the agreement is a legally binding document.

Why Does Vendor Contract Management Deserve Your Attention?

The general “sales pitch” for vendor contract management lies in its ability to control costs, mitigate risks, and efficiently deliver purchased products and services. Other advantages to having a formal system of vendor contract management in place include the following.

  • Better selection of vendors: Get more value out of your suppliers by choosing the right ones to start working within the first place. Contract management involves better decision-making: Do you keep a vendor on board or drop it for another that provides better value? And what about fine-tuning your contracts with current suppliers? Overall, contract management results in a larger selection of quality vendors and subsequently better deals.
  • More proactive planning: Nothing’s worse than being stuck with a bad contract. If you don’t look over the terms correctly, you might end up with an agreement that risks your company. Perhaps there are no auditing responsibilities or reporting requirements to cover contract non-compliance, or maybe there’s no incentive to safeguard sensitive information. Vendor contract management aims to prevent these problems by understanding the liabilities of every agreement and verifying exactly how the contract contributes to your organization’s needs.
  • Clearer terms and conditions: One of the first things taught to business strategists is never to sign a contract you don’t fully understand. Using simple language and terminology, a contract manager can craft agreements that clearly show stakeholders exactly what’s expected of them. Any omissions regarding project scope, deadlines, the nature of the deliverables, or payment plans can be costly later.
  • Organizational benefits: Contract management makes working with many varied suppliers generally easier. You’ll have a repository to store and manage all your contracts and invoices, providing a holistic view of your vendor relationships. The result is accelerated agreements and faster procurement procedures.
  • Ensuring contract compliance: Contracts don’t always go as planned, so learning to prepare for disruptions is part of the job. Breaches in the contract can involve defective product shipments or failed payments. Addressing these issues early on can protect your business’s reputation and daily operations. Doing so involves performance reviews and audits to ensure both parties uphold their part of the deal.
  • Cutting down on rogue spending: Also known as maverick spending, rogue spending occurs whenever employees purchase products or services on short notice without taking the time to look through procurement policies or contract requirements. Rogue spending can easily result in inefficient use of the budget, hence why contract management must find a way to keep contracts together in one place and make them easily accessible to stakeholders in the business.

These advantages are only amplified with the use of SaaS automated vendor contract management solutions integrating with your ERP to accelerate certain tasks, minimize disruptions, and achieve business objectives through comprehensive multisourcing. Real-time functionality improves your company’s ability to take timely improvement actions in supplier contract management. 

Vendor Management vs. Vendor Contract Management

Even a single word can greatly transform the meaning of a term. Vendor contract management must be distinguished by its related but still separate concept, vendor management (also known as supplier management).

Vendor managers work mainly with suppliers directly to develop long-term business relationships. Their roles typically involve:

  • Building an overall strategy for securing suppliers and resources.
  • Managing a list of preferred suppliers.
  • Maintaining business relationships through communication, support, and transparency.
  • Defining performance metrics and key performance indicators that define how to measure the value that you get from your suppliers.
  • Working with service agreements overarching contracts that cover a multitude of transactions with a single vendor. These documents contain general terms and conditions that streamline ordering from the same company and apply to all transactions with it. Specific order contracts can add more specific details.
  • Handling risk management on a supplier basis.
  • Finding opportunities to save, such as consolidating multiple needs into a single purchase to take advantage of bulk discounts.

Contract managers, on the other hand, focus on individual contract agreements. They look at the requirements and terms of each contract and aim to maximize the value received out of every purchase. Their roles comprise:

  • Writing up new procurement contracts with the scope and needs of the project in mind.
  • Working with the contract lifecycle to ensure that business needs are fulfilled from the beginning of the engagement to the end.
  • Negotiating with suppliers so that every deal is a win-win for everybody involved.

You can think of the distinction this way: contract managers have a stricter focus and dig deeper into each individual contract, while vendor managers look at holistic supplier relationship management across multiple contracts and typically have more contact points with the vendors.

The two processes are also located in different parts of the company. Contract management is usually a component of the buyer’s procurement team and the vendor’s sales team. Vendor management is the responsibility of either the procurement or project management division, or it might even be in an entirely separate department in larger enterprises.

The Challenges Faced by Vendor Contract Managers

Dealing with business contracts is ultimately a vendor risk management exercise. Every business relationship involves some degree of risk, whether with a manufacturer or a contractor. You might not receive the standard of quality you expect for the purchase price, or contract terms might be broken on a moment’s notice.

Another challenge is working with many varied suppliers at one time. Each one might have its own payment terms and schedules, making it difficult to budget properly. Storing all the data necessary to keep track of multiple vendors is another potential issue, hence the need for vendor contract management systems.

Streamline vendor contract management with digitization

Procurement automation software makes supplier contract management easy and efficient through digitized contract repository.

Vendor Contract Management Steps

We’ve cleared up what working with vendor contracts entails and why it matters, so the only question that remains is how you go about the actual vendor contract management process.

Creating Vendor Contracts

From the nature of the deliverables to the terms of payment, the goal of a contract is to communicate clearly the expectations for both the buyer and seller. To that end, the document must include information like:

  • Scope: What are the quantities of products being purchased or the duration and extent of the services rendered? These amounts, plus any extra work the supplier is expected to provide, define the scope of the transaction.
  • Compensation: How much money will the client business pay for the contract’s fulfillment? How will payments be determined if the price is subject to change over time?
  • Timeframes: What deadlines does the seller have to deliver the goods and services? What about payment deadlines for the buyer?
  • Legal liability: Determine what happens if the contract goes wrong in any way. Agree upon legal liability beforehand to mitigate risks in the future.
  • End result: Depending on how well the interaction goes, the client business may choose to either renew the contract with the vendor for another time or terminate the relationship.

When it comes time to write up the contract document, take the following steps to make sure you include all the necessary details.

  • Specify the terms and conditions of the agreement: This section will be the meat and potatoes of the contract. Define the purchase price and payment terms. Lay out the seller’s obligations regarding the delivery of goods and services.
  • Work out the legal details: With an attorney or your legal department, write up the agreement policies, such as any applicable warranties, confidentiality provisions, or promises regarding the quality of the deliverables.
  • Don’t leave out compliance and confidentiality: Contracts are legally binding documents, so obtain proper due diligence to enforce them. Have a clause claiming your right to audit a supplier. And since B2B interactions often require the sharing of sensitive data, mention data security and confidentiality as well.
  • Know what to do if something goes wrong: Despite best efforts, not all contracts go according to plan, so know what you want to do beforehand. Will you terminate the contract? Will litigation or arbitration be allowed? When designing supplier contracts, hope for the best and prepare for the worst.

We recommend against writing the document with a simple word processing program. Look to templates or vendor contract management software to get the job done more efficiently.

Vendor Contracts and Ongoing Management

Contract management doesn’t end once the document has been published and sent. Be ready to take a proactive approach to ensuring contract compliance after the fact. Don’t be reactive and just wait for problems to pop up on their own.

  • Have a dedicated team to handle performance reviews. These vendor contract management teams are middlemen between internal stakeholders and external vendors. Contract management has become such a high-demand field that many jobs have arisen specifically to address it.
  • Know the market and what’s on offer to negotiate vendor agreements. Find out which suppliers are the most trustworthy, and don’t forget to study compliance requirements, industry-specific guidelines, and other regulations too.
  • Facilitate back-and-forth communication between the vendor and the company. Vendors should be considered part of the team, and lasting relationships can be even more valuable than just a one-off deal.
  • Evaluate performance at the end of a contract and determine whether to renew the agreement, terminate it, or renegotiate it somehow. Use what you’ve learned over the contract period to develop better practices for future agreements.

The perfect vendor contract management workflow won’t emerge overnight. Developing it is an ongoing process that requires time and continuous improvement, so don’t be discouraged if your first set of contracts doesn’t go perfectly as planned.

The Role of Software in Vendor Contract Management

Software has found its way into many facets of business operations, and vendor relationship and contract management are among those fields. First off, it can be used as a digital repository for your contract documents to sort and search through them quickly. But software goes beyond being just a storage medium.

  • Creating digital documents: From invoices to the contracts themselves, vendor relationship management is much more accessible through software. Rich text editing tools allow users to sign the document, add comments, and export to a PDF format. Templates can also be used to speed up document processing.
  • Ensuring data security: One of the greatest forms of vendor risk is the ability to entrust sensitive data to third parties. Enhanced security available in most software platforms will greatly reduce this risk. For instance, role-based access control will prevent unauthorized parties from accessing certain sensitive documents and information.
  • Notifications: Phone notifications are perfect for contract management, as constant reminders are necessary to keep things moving. Take approval workflows as an example; the legal team might have to approve a contract once it’s written, and a notification speeds up the process considerably.
  • Integrations: Vendor contract management ties in with many other aspects of business management, so integrations with other software suites your business already uses can be greatly beneficial. You can sync up dates and deadlines with a calendar or combine your communication platform with the software to boost collaboration.

Tipalti’s unified platform of Procurement and AP automation software products integrates with your ERP or accounting software.  Your company can achieve effective vendor contract management and B2B payment solutions with a digitized document repository. 

The software streamlines processes and eliminates paper-based documents and recordkeeping to reduce human error and inefficiencies. Learn more about paperless, self-service supplier onboarding through a Supplier Hub provided with Tipalti’s AP automation software for the procure-to-pay cycle (and its other features). 

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