What happened?
Public procurement remains under growing scrutiny across the UK as new transparency, reporting and supplier accountability measures continue to take effect under the Procurement Act 2023.
Recent legal and procurement commentary published over the past week has highlighted the increasing compliance expectations facing both contracting authorities and suppliers. New requirements around payment reporting, performance transparency, supplier monitoring and contract lifecycle reporting are now becoming operational realities rather than future policy discussions.
At the same time, the government continues to explore additional reforms designed to strengthen economic resilience, improve supply chain visibility and ensure public spending delivers wider social and economic value.
While many organisations have focused heavily on winning contracts, the emerging direction of travel places far greater emphasis on how contracts are managed, monitored and evidenced after award.
The result is a procurement environment where governance, transparency and contract assurance are becoming just as important as bid quality.
Why it matters
For suppliers, contractors and public sector organisations, this shift changes the risk landscape significantly.
Historically, many procurement teams concentrated most of their effort on tender submissions and contract mobilisation. Once delivery began, governance arrangements often became less structured.
The newer approach expects far greater visibility across the full contract lifecycle.
Contracting authorities increasingly need evidence that suppliers are delivering against commitments, meeting reporting obligations, managing risks and maintaining appropriate standards throughout delivery.
Suppliers face increasing expectations around:
- Contract performance reporting
- Supply chain oversight
- Payment transparency
- Social value delivery
- Governance and assurance controls
- Contract variation management
- Risk escalation processes
For public bodies, the challenge is equally important.
Stronger transparency obligations create greater scrutiny from regulators, auditors, elected members, stakeholders and the public.
Poor governance can create operational, financial and reputational consequences long before a contract formally fails.
The wider lesson is that procurement is increasingly becoming a governance discipline rather than simply a commercial exercise.
Winning the contract is only the beginning.
What good looks like
Organisations that perform well under increasing procurement scrutiny typically share several characteristics.
Strong contract ownership
There is clear accountability for contract performance, reporting and risk management.
Reliable management information
Performance reporting is supported by evidence rather than assumptions. Data is reviewed regularly and challenged appropriately.
Effective risk management
Risks are identified early, documented clearly and escalated through defined governance routes.
Supply chain visibility
Organisations understand their subcontractor dependencies, delivery risks and compliance obligations throughout the supply chain.
Transparent reporting
Performance, payment and social value commitments are tracked and evidenced throughout delivery.
Independent assurance
Periodic reviews provide confidence that controls remain effective and contractual obligations continue to be met.
Good governance does not create bureaucracy for its own sake.
It creates confidence that contracts are being delivered properly, risks are being managed and obligations are being met.
What to do now by audience size and sector
SMEs and smaller suppliers
Review existing public sector contracts and ensure reporting obligations, social value commitments and delivery evidence are fully documented.
Mid-sized suppliers
Strengthen contract governance frameworks. Ensure performance reporting, risk registers and escalation procedures are operating consistently across contracts.
Large suppliers and framework providers
Consider independent contract assurance reviews. Focus on transparency requirements, subcontractor oversight and contract lifecycle controls.
Local authorities and public bodies
Review governance arrangements against emerging transparency requirements. Ensure reporting processes are robust enough to withstand scrutiny.
Housing, health and education organisations
Assess whether supplier monitoring arrangements provide sufficient visibility over performance, risk and delivery outcomes.
Consortiums and partnership delivery models
Confirm governance responsibilities, reporting structures and assurance arrangements are clearly defined across all delivery partners.
How TPMG helps
TPMG supports organisations through Public Sector Advisory, Contractor Advisory, Internal Audit & Risk Assurance, Consortium and Policy Shop services.
We help suppliers, contractors and public sector organisations strengthen procurement governance, improve contract assurance, review compliance arrangements and build confidence that delivery frameworks can withstand increasing scrutiny.
Our focus is practical assurance that helps organisations manage risk, improve transparency and strengthen delivery performance throughout the contract lifecycle.