The short answerA Chief Procurement Officer leads a business's procurement — how it sources and buys the goods and services it needs, manages suppliers, and controls the associated spend. The role drives value and manages risk across often-substantial external spending, and has become more strategic as procurement's impact on cost, resilience, and sustainability has grown.

The Chief Procurement Officer leads how a business buys — its sourcing, suppliers, and spending on goods and services. Here is what the role involves and why it matters.

What the role owns

A Chief Procurement Officer owns how a business buys — sourcing and procuring the goods and services it needs (from raw materials to services and indirect spend), selecting and managing suppliers, negotiating and managing contracts, and controlling the associated spend. For many businesses, external spending on goods and services is very large, so leading it well has a direct and significant impact on cost and value. The role owns this substantial and important area.

Driving value

A core purpose of procurement is driving value from the business's spending — securing the right goods and services at the right cost, quality, and terms, and finding savings and value across a large spend base. Because procurement often covers a big share of a business's costs, effective procurement leadership can deliver significant value to the bottom line. Driving this value, through smart sourcing, negotiation, and supplier management, is much of what the role does.

Managing supplier risk and relationships

Procurement also manages the risks and relationships in the supply base — supplier reliability, quality, dependency, and increasingly ethical and sustainability considerations in sourcing. Strong supplier relationships and well-managed supplier risk protect the business and can be a source of advantage. This risk and relationship dimension, alongside cost, is central to procurement leadership, and has grown as supply-base risks have become more prominent.

Increasingly strategic

Procurement has become more strategic — its impact on cost, resilience, quality, innovation (through suppliers), and sustainability making it more than a back-office buying function. A modern Chief Procurement Officer contributes strategically, shaping the supply base to support the business's goals, including its sustainability commitments. This elevation makes strong, strategic procurement leadership genuinely valuable, and worth hiring well.

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Frequently asked questions

What does a Chief Procurement Officer do?

They lead how a business sources and buys the goods and services it needs — managing sourcing, suppliers, contracts, and spend — driving value from often-substantial external spending while managing supplier risk and, increasingly, ethical and sustainability considerations.

What is the difference between procurement and supply chain?

Procurement focuses on how a business buys — sourcing, suppliers, contracts, and spend; supply chain is broader, covering the end-to-end flow of making and delivering products (planning, sourcing, manufacturing, logistics). Procurement is often part of, or closely linked to, the supply chain.

Related: How to Hire a Chief Procurement Officer · What Does a Chief Supply Chain Officer Do? · What Does a COO Do?

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