BTW EP 25: The S-Word: Why Procurement Must Stop Saying “Savings” (and What to Replace it With)
Release Date: 02/18/2026
Art of Procurement
In this episode of the ProcureTech Insider Startup of the Week, host Jyothi Hartley speaks with Ricky Ho, Co-Founder and CEO of SourceReady, about how AI and big data are transforming global supplier discovery and sourcing strategy. SourceReady is building an AI-powered sourcing platform designed to automate the most time-consuming parts of the sourcing process – from supplier discovery to quote comparison and risk analysis. With access to 1.2 million suppliers across 100 countries, the platform helps procurement and sourcing teams uncover new suppliers, analyze risk, and streamline supplier...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
“The winners will be the people who make it happen themselves. The losers will be the ones that just bury their heads in the sand.” - Andrew Daley, Managing Director, Digital Procurement and Supply Chain at Edbury Daley The AI revolution is transforming procurement faster than ever before. Whether you’re upskilling your team or rethinking your operating model, the choices you make now will set the pace for your entire function tomorrow. In this episode, Andrew Daley, Managing Director of Digital Procurement and Supply Chain at Edbury Daley, returns to share what he’s seeing on the...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
Procurement’s incentive problem doesn’t stop at the contract. It gets worse after signature. In this Phil-Ins episode of “Buy: The Way…To Purposeful Procurement,” Rich Ham and Philip Ideson are joined by Kelly Barner to unpack three “Buy Laws” at once, mainly because they’re inseparable in practice. First: count only what hits the ledger. If the value doesn’t show up in actuals, it doesn’t count. That means moving procurement out of the projection business and into the results business… where the CFO lives. Second: stop counting only the good. The status quo lets category...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
“We compete with people's homes more than we do with other coworking locations because my job is to get people to want to come into my spaces, and that is what I focus on every single day.” - Sarah Travers, CEO, Workbar The future of work is unfolding quickly, and procurement leaders who also own real estate decisions can’t afford to ignore trends in co-working. Whether you need to unlock flexibility, attract top talent, or better control costs, new workplace models are rapidly replacing traditional long-term leases. In this episode, host Philip Ideson speaks with Sarah Travers, CEO of...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
“Sometimes you just need to recognize that getting from the baseline, whatever your baseline, to the next step… that's really significant.” - Jyothi Hartley, Director of Digital Enablement, AOP Art of Procurement is proud to launch a brand-new podcast series: the ProcureTech Insider. The procurement technology market is evolving faster than ever, promising exponential transformation. But what actually works in the real world? ProcureTech Insider exists to take procurement leaders and decision makers beyond the hype. In this new series, we will bring you real-world intelligence from...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
“The procurement and supply chain professions are ever more relevant to the prosperity of nations and to businesses as we go into the future.” - Ben Farrell, Global Chief Executive Officer, The Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply (CIPS) Striking a balance between tradition and disruption is at the top of the agenda for today’s procurement leaders. Whether it’s shifting global dynamics, technology, or the push for greater influence, the function’s boundaries (and its reputation) are up for grabs. Ben Farrell brings a perspective forged in the British Army, major retail,...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
Procurement’s biggest measurement problem isn’t that “savings” is incomplete. It’s that “savings” has become a substitute for truth. In the first Buy: The Way…To Purposeful Procurement episode of 2026, co-hosts Philip Ideson and Rich Ham unveil the first of the show’s new procurement “Buy-laws.” It’s the one that almost every serious practitioner agrees with, but very few organizations are ready to operationalize: replace savings with defined value. That doesn’t mean adding a few extra KPIs in addition to savings. It means removing the word entirely and replacing it...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
“Procurement is what you make of it. It can be a bargain basement function at some firms, but it’s also becoming more strategic. We have to take a more holistic, integrated view of things and try to understand the big business problems we can help solve and then offer a business solution, not just a procurement solution.” – Amit Saronwala, VP, Global Indirect Supply Management, Medtronic Procurement leaders in healthcare are feeling the heat: innovation cycles are tightening, supplier bases are vast, and new pressures on cost and cash flow are here to stay. So how do you build more...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
“Now with agentic AI, RFPs are becoming and will become even leaner, and they'll cut to the chase a whole lot faster. There'll be a lot less fluff.” - Barri Horn, Director of Product Marketing for AI for SAP Ariba and SAP Fieldglass' strategic procurement portfolios AI is reshaping the RFP process, but smart procurement leaders know they have to think beyond speed or efficiency drivers and, instead, reimagine the value they deliver. As teams turn to AI to break free from past challenges, the question isn’t if change is coming, but how to capture its advantages while managing risk, trust,...
info_outlineArt of Procurement
“There is a limit on how much you can save, but there is no limit on how much you can make.” - Sergio Martin Procurement is evolving fast. The true differentiator now is how the function can become a partner for growth and resilience. That means reimagining “customer experience” at every touchpoint, not just inside the business, but with suppliers as well. In this episode, procurement advisor and former procurement and supply chain executive Sergio Martin explains what it takes to deliver that value. Sergio shares practical stories from his experience at companies like Burberry and...
info_outlineProcurement’s biggest measurement problem isn’t that “savings” is incomplete. It’s that “savings” has become a substitute for truth.
In the first Buy: The Way…To Purposeful Procurement episode of 2026, co-hosts Philip Ideson and Rich Ham unveil the first of the show’s new procurement “Buy-laws.” It’s the one that almost every serious practitioner agrees with, but very few organizations are ready to operationalize: replace savings with defined value.
That doesn’t mean adding a few extra KPIs in addition to savings. It means removing the word entirely and replacing it with a primary metric that includes verified spend reduction and revenue generation, plus company-specific priorities like emissions reduction, process improvement, resilience, risk reduction, and anything else the business actually cares about.
To help map what this kind of “value” can and should include, Phil and Rich are joined by Omer Abdullah, co-founder of The Smart Cube and co-author of Risk and Your Supply Chain: Preparing for the Next Global Crisis. Omer has spent decades close to the function, advising teams, building intelligence services around procurement decisions, and now working at the intersection of startups, go-to-market strategy, and what he calls a “post-AI” future for procurement.
The idea of “post-AI” matters more than it sounds. Omer isn’t talking about a world where AI fades away. He’s talking about the moment when AI becomes a hygiene factor – embedded, expected, and no longer a differentiator. The result is uncomfortable: once AI takes the transactional load, procurement doesn’t automatically become “more strategic.” Not unless leaders define what that actually means, what outcomes it should produce, and how to measure those outcomes without defaulting back to the simplest (and most misleading) number on the page.
The conversation also goes straight at one of procurement’s most corrosive incentives: short-termism. The function keeps making long-term sacrifices for short-term wins because the system asks it to. Rich calls it a “scourge,” and Omer lays out what a healthier alternative could look like. He recommends a scorecard that includes in-year expectations, multi-year outcomes that reflect how value compounds over time, and a controlled level of discretionary evaluation to capture the contributions that matter but refuse to sit neatly inside a spreadsheet cell.
Underneath all of this is a truth that the episode doesn’t dodge: none of it works without executive support. The CFO and CEO have to buy into procurement’s expanded definition of value. Procurement can’t wait to be understood; they have to be sold. Procurement is a business within a business, and the C-suite is its most important customer. If leaders don’t see the function’s potential, it’s on procurement to advocate, educate, and prove (through better definitions and better scorekeeping) that the status quo isn’t merely outdated. It’s actively harmful.
Links: