
Last week ProcureCon Europe hosted its flagship international event for procurement practitioners online, for the first time. The virtual event proved very popular, probably because […]
Last week ProcureCon Europe hosted its flagship international event for procurement practitioners online, for the first time. The virtual event proved very popular, probably because […]
By nature procurement is a competitive business – and while that sounds obvious, sometimes we don’t stop and think about just how hard it is […]
Continuing our series of procurement and supply chain related predictions for 2020, we have gathered a variety of predictions from leading vendors in the procurement […]
Public Spend Forum (PSF) is a public sector procurement global community and market intelligence platform dedicated to improving public procurement and the public sector market. On […]
In our overview post on eWorld last week, we promised you the key takeaways from law firm CMS on Brexit, contract clauses and the supply […]
It’s been a week of great events in our S2P ‘vendor sphere.’ I spent Monday and Tuesday of last week at the Zycus Horizon event […]
Dominating the headlines over the weekend was the scrapping of the Brexit Ferry contract due to an Irish investor withdrawing support. This is the awarding […]
You most likely heard the news over the past couple of days about the (almost) £14 million Brexit ferry contract awarded to a company (Seaborne […]
Public Spend Forum (PSF) is a public sector procurement global community and market intelligence platform dedicated to improving public procurement and the public sector market. […]
Public Spend Forum (PSF) is a public sector procurement global community and market intelligence platform dedicated to improving public procurement and the public sector market. […]
We touched on the NEPO Business Club in part 1 yesterday and the collaborative buying organisation’s work with the local North-east business community. In terms […]
A frequent topic this week around the Carillion troubles has been whether government buyers have in some sense been wrong to "accept the lowest bid" […]