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Transform Procurement
Posted by Literary Titan


Transform Procurement: The Value of E-Auctions is a practical, clear-eyed guide to building an e-auction program that actually works, not just as software adoption but as a cultural and strategic shift inside procurement. Author Janice Marquardt walks through the mechanics of e-auctions, the internal politics that can quietly sabotage them, the supplier psychology involved, and the importance of disciplined scopes of work, executive support, training, metrics, and thoughtful parameters. What could have been a dry technical manual becomes a lived account of trial, resistance, and eventual fluency, beginning with her own failed first auction and expanding into lessons drawn from thousands of events across materials, services, and supposedly “non-auctionable” categories.
I was most drawn to the book’s insistence that e-auctions aren’t cold by nature, but can become cold when people use them lazily. Marquardt is persuasive when she reframes the old “sharpen your pencil” phone call as its own kind of theater, warm on the surface but often vague, biased, and inefficient underneath. That comparison stayed with me because it gives the book its moral center: fairness is not always the same thing as friendliness. I also appreciated how often she returns to the human messiness behind procurement. The CEO’s friend calling to escape an auction, the procurement team mapping the process as a “black hole,” the oddly delightful leadership-conference auction built around guessing a Whitesnake song, all of these moments make the subject feel less like process engineering and more like organizational psychology with spreadsheets nearby.
The writing is at its best when Marquardt trusts her experience and lets anecdotes carry the argument. Her tone is practical, unpretentious, and refreshingly free of mystique; she writes like someone who has been burned, learned the hard way, and now wants to spare the reader a few scars. The book’s structure is more like a manual, especially in the parameter-heavy sections on bid ceilings, reserve prices, overtime rules, supplier training, and metrics. I didn’t find that a flaw so much as a signal of the book’s purpose. It wants to be used. The ideas are strongest when they complicate the usual procurement reflexes: that price is never just price, that scope quality may be the hidden prize of an auction program, and that suppliers can benefit from transparency when the process is built with care rather than intimidation.
I came away from Transform Procurement with respect for both the discipline and the humility behind Marquardt’s approach. The book doesn’t romanticize e-auctions, but it does rescue them from their worst reputation, showing how they can reduce cycle time, clarify expectations, widen competition, and make procurement less dependent on charisma, incumbency, and back-channel comfort. It’s a smart, grounded read for procurement leaders, sourcing professionals, executives considering an e-auction program, and anyone who suspects their organization’s negotiation habits are more emotional and inherited than anyone wants to admit. I’d recommend it especially to teams that want practical guidance, but also need the courage to change how people think before they change what people do.
Pages: 146 | ASIN : B0F79T6F25
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: auctions and small business, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, general technology, goodreads, indie author, Janice Marquardt, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, project managemetn, read, reader, reading, reference, story, Transform Procurement, writer, writing



