How does the procurement function influence how a company is perceived by customers, investors, employees, and society?
A strong reputation is one of the most valuable intangible assets a company has. It affects customer loyalty, recruitment, market value, and access to capital. Procurement contributes by ensuring responsible supplier choices, ethical processes, and transparency throughout the value chain.
A mature procurement function contributes to the company’s standing through multiple channels:
When control and transparency are lacking, a single supplier incident can damage the entire organization’s reputation. Violations of labor rights, environmental standards, or corruption in the supply chain can immediately impact trust and brand value.
To measure how procurement affects corporate reputation, you can track KPIs such as:
The procurement function is now one of the most visible indicators of how a company practices responsibility. Ethical and transparent procurement is not only a defensive mechanism, but an active way to build trust and strengthen the company’s brand. Through responsible procurement processes, the business can protect — and in many cases increase — its standing in the market.
Harvard Business Review (2007): 'Reputation and Its Risks'
Fairmarkit (2024): 'Why Managing Reputational Risk is a Procurement Challenge'
ResearchGate (2023): 'Impact of Ethical Procurement Practices in Enhancing Corporate Reputation and Stakeholder Trust in Canada'
ScienceDirect (2020): 'Green Supplier Management and Reputational Effects'
Procurement Magazine (2024): 'Procurement as the Key to Reputation Management'
Sustainability Directory (2023): 'To What Extent Can Sourcing Choices Improve Corporate Reputation?'
arXiv (2022): 'Corporate Reputation under Supply Chain Pressure'