Executive Summary
Key reflections
Protecting the supply chain in the face of volatility
For five years the RLB Procurement Trends survey has been titled ‘Getting Closer to Your Supply Chain’. It perhaps now feels more appropriate to rename it ‘Investing in Your Supply Chain’. In a volatile market the long-term operating models of contractors have been questioned and clients are realising the risk that supply chain fragility poses to their own operating models.
So is collaboration the winner?
In previous tightening markets, more competitive forms of procurement have seen a resurgence. But that is not universally the case in our 2024 survey. More than half of contractors are seeing collaborative practices in procurement, including a willingness to share risk. Clients may still have red lines for their own risk appetite, but they are willing to procure in ways that avoid just shifting that risk to the supply chain.
And will we finally move to procuring better outcomes?
Over the five years of our survey there has been a positive move in both the public and private sectors in the adoption of practices seeking to procure for value and not just at lowest cost. There is still a way to go in contracting for those outcomes, as evidenced by some of the responses we have received on green procurement practices. When in force the Procurement Act may be more evolution than revolution, but the introduction and reporting of KPIs may, if implemented well, see a further shift to procuring better outcomes.
Summary of our main findings
The key changes since our 2023 survey
Macro-economic conditions
Looking back over the previous 12 months, input cost inflation has finally stabilised, but at the same time economic conditions have worsened and pipelines have slowed. This graph compares the BCIS All-in Tender Price Index with the BCIS Building Cost Index.
Key market conditions
- For the past 12 months tender price inflation and input cost inflation have broadly moved consistently.
- This follows the 2022/2023 period which saw a sustained period of input costs increases outstripping tender price uplifts.
- For the forecast 12 months ahead, slowing pipelines are expected to result in input costs once again outstripping tender prices, resulting in margin compression.
What it means for projects
The industry is entering a more challenging market while not having any real period of recovery from 2022, when input costs significantly outstripped tender prices.
In the procurement landscape, contractors are therefore keenly chasing pipeline, while being mindful of risk exposure both upstream (in contract conditions) and in downstream supply chain fragility.

The urgency for replacement workload will influence bidding and procurement.
- Roger Hogg, Research and Development Manager

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