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The Hidden Cost of Contract Mismanagement

News

Poor contract management costs orgs 9.2% of revenue—fueling budget blowouts, penalties, and eroding public trust.

A 2022 study by the World Commerce & Contracting association found that organisations lose an average of 9.2% of their annual revenue due to ineffective contract management. This includes overlooked rebates, missed service obligations, and penalty costs. In the public sector, these inefficiencies contribute to budget blowouts and reduced public trust.

Contract mismanagement is more than an administrative failure—it’s a significant source of financial loss. Research indicates that large organizations lose 9.2% of annual revenue due to avoidable contract issues, including scope creep, unclaimed discounts, and unmonitored obligations. For public institutions, this translates to millions in lost public value and political risk.

According to the World Commerce & Contracting Association, this 9.2% figure is consistent across industries and geographies. 

The causes include:

  • Poor visibility of contract terms

  • Weak handover from procurement to delivery teams

  • Inadequate systems for tracking performance milestones

In the context of government spending—where contract values often range from $10 million to $1 billion per year—this waste could exceed $90 million per billion of spend. Much of this could be prevented with basic performance tracking and data-led dashboards.

In education, health, infrastructure, and local government, contract mismanagement undermines service delivery and invites scrutiny from auditors and regulators. 

Without performance visibility:

  • Obligations are forgotten

  • Deliverables are delayed

  • Financial penalties accrue silently

Structured systems with real-time alerts can surface missed milestones, ensure obligations are proactively tracked, and avoid losses. 

Institutions also gain the ability to:

  • Track payments against actual performance

  • Monitor supplier reliability and delivery standards

Source: World Commerce & Contracting,
www.worldcc.com  

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