Characteristics of tail spend
Tail spend typically includes:
Spot or one-off purchases that aren't part of regular procurement planning
Maverick or "rogue" purchases made outside approved contracts
Purchases via corporate payment cards and petty cash
Low-value transactions that bypass formal procurement processes
Purchases from a large number of suppliers, each receiving minimal business
Indirect and non-core purchases that remain essential for operations
Key tail spend concepts
Understanding the following concepts is essential for effectively managing tail spend in your organisation.
Tail spend analysis
The systematic examination of an organisation's procurement data to identify, categorise, and understand the composition of tail spend. This analysis serves as the foundation for developing effective tail spend management strategies and identifying cost-saving opportunities.
Tail spend management
A structured approach to controlling, optimising, and deriving value from the non-strategic, low-value purchases that make up an organisation's tail spend. Effective tail spend management can deliver cost savings of 5-10% according to industry research.
Long tail procurement
Another term for tail spend, referencing the visual representation when transactions are graphed by value, showing a small number of high-value transactions and a 'long tail' of numerous low-value purchases.
Tail spend consolidation
The practice of combining multiple small purchases into larger, more strategic buying arrangements to increase leverage, reduce transaction costs and improve terms with suppliers.
Tail spend supplier rationalisation
The process of systematically reducing the number of suppliers in the tail spend category, often consolidating purchases with fewer, more strategic partners to improve efficiency and reduce administrative burden.
Tail spend automation
The implementation of digital tools and processes specifically designed to streamline and manage high-volume, low-value purchases without significant manual intervention from procurement professionals.
Unmanaged tail spend
Purchases that occur outside established procurement processes and governance frameworks, often leading to missed savings opportunities and increased organisational risk.
Tail spend visibility
The degree to which an organisation can identify, track and analyse its tail spend transactions across all business units, locations, and spending categories.
Tail spend classification
The process of categorising tail spend transactions into meaningful groups based on attributes such as supplier, product type, business unit or spend category to enable more effective management.
Tail spend maverick buying
Unauthorised or non-compliant purchasing activity that occurs within the tail spend category, often bypassing established procurement processes and approved suppliers.
Tail spend e-catalogues
Digital marketplaces or product listings specifically designed to channel tail spend purchases through approved suppliers at negotiated prices, reducing maverick spend.
Tail spend purchasing cards (p-cards)
Corporate payment cards issued to employees specifically for managing small-value purchases that would otherwise contribute to administrative costs in the tail spend category.
Tail spend outsourcing
The practice of engaging third-party specialists to manage the entirety of an organisation's tail spend, leveraging external expertise and economies of scale.
Tail spend analytics
Advanced data analysis techniques applied to tail spend data to uncover patterns, opportunities and risks that might otherwise remain hidden in large transaction volumes.
Tail spend cost reduction
Strategic initiatives focused on reducing the direct and indirect costs associated with tail spend through supplier consolidation, process improvement and increased spending controls.
Benefits of tail spend management
Managing tail spend effectively can deliver significant benefits to organisations, including cost savings of 5-10%, increased procurement efficiency, reduced supplier risk, and improved stakeholder satisfaction.
Despite representing only a small portion of total spend by value, tail spend often consumes disproportionate resources due to high transaction volumes and administrative complexity.
Organisations that implement structured tail spend management programmes typically see improvements in spend visibility, supplier compliance, process efficiency, and overall procurement performance. The most successful approaches combine data analytics, process simplification, and appropriate technology solutions tailored to the specific characteristics of an organisation's tail spend profile.
Managing tail spend effectively
Effective tail spend management typically follows a five-step process:
Identify and analyse your tail spend through comprehensive data collection and classification
Streamline internal processes to reduce complexity and administrative burden
Organise procurement data to enable ongoing visibility and analysis
Implement insights through appropriate sourcing and management strategies
Monitor benefits using clear key performance indicators aligned with organisational objectives
For most organisations, the challenges of managing tail spend cannot be addressed through a one-size-fits-all approach. Success requires a tailored strategy that considers the unique characteristics of the organisation's spending patterns, supplier relationships, and procurement capabilities.