The Challenge
A regional distribution company with $12M in annual revenue worked with over 200 vendors across packaging, raw materials, logistics, and services. The business had grown steadily for a decade, and vendor relationships had accumulated organically — some stretching back 15 years.
The problem: nobody was systematically tracking vendor pricing over time. Invoices were processed, paid, and filed. The bookkeeper caught obvious errors, but gradual price increases — 2% here, 3% there — flew under the radar quarter after quarter.
What CentSight Found
CentSight analyzed 18 months of vendor payment data and identified pricing anomalies across the vendor base:
- 34 vendors had implemented price increases without formal notification or contract amendment. The average increase was 8.2% — well above the inflation rate for their categories.
- 6 vendors were charging different rates for the same products depending on which location placed the order. Inconsistent pricing across warehouses was costing $28K/year.
- 3 duplicate vendor relationships: Two vendors had been acquired by the same parent company but continued invoicing separately, preventing volume discount qualification.
- Seasonal pricing patterns: CentSight identified that 8 vendors consistently raised prices in Q4, likely anticipating end-of-year budget spending. Timing purchases differently could save an additional $15K annually.
The Fix
The operations team used CentSight's data to prioritize renegotiations with the highest-impact vendors first. Armed with 18 months of pricing history and specific documentation of undisclosed increases, they had data-driven conversations rather than emotional ones.
Of the 34 vendors with price increases, 22 agreed to rollbacks or rate locks. The remaining 12 were evaluated for replacement, with 5 eventually switched to alternative suppliers at better rates. The duplicate vendor relationships were consolidated, immediately qualifying for volume discounts.
The Impact
Total annual savings: $140K — representing a 1.2% improvement in overall margins on a $12M revenue base. For a distribution business with thin margins, that $140K dropped almost entirely to the bottom line.
More importantly, CentSight now monitors all 200+ vendor relationships continuously. The operations team gets an alert within 48 hours of any pricing anomaly, ensuring that gradual price creep never compounds undetected again.