A lack of understanding among finance directors of the benefits of IT
procurement is starting to hit company profits, according to VAR
Probrand.
With IT representing the largest indirect procurement spend of any
organisation, financial directors, buyers and IT departments could be saving
time and money on the buying process as well as getting deals as part of a best
practice approach to procurement, the Birmingham-based reseller claimed.
Stephen Bushell, marketing director at Probrand, which launched it own online
procurement tool – The IT Index - earlier this year, said: “Spend visibility has
never been higher up the agenda. With IT’s important role and related budget
share catching the financial eye, the next evolution for practitioners is to
understand how to improve methods of securing better IT for cheaper prices.
“With IT bought more efficiently and at cheaper prices, organisations can
actually stretch the reach of their existing budgets to accommodate more
advanced and capable IT. Aside from time and fiscal savings, the end result of
better IT is that FDs can directly drive the business forward at the same time
as maximising budgets. This compliments findings that FDs spend around 30 per
cent of their time working with IT heads on strategy.”
Peter Robbins, managing director of Probrand, and also e-procurement
authority to the private and public sectors, said: “Practitioners can help a
client police their IT spend and evaluate how they can get best value from their
IT budget. More often than not, practitioners simply don’t appreciate the
potential impact of user friendly e-procurement tool sets. They can undoubtedly
be a recession busting tool.”
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