Operations and spend
Procurement for NGOs: compliant buying without the paper chase
Donor procurement rules exist because money disappears in buying. Software cannot make a bad procurement honest, but it can make the compliant path the easy path: requests checked against budgets, quotes compared transparently, and every decision logged.
The request is the control point
Compliance fails at the moment someone commits money informally. A purchase request that names the grant, the budget line, and the justification — routed through the right approval chain before anyone contacts a supplier — is the single highest-value control in NGO operations.
- Requests carry line items, estimated amounts, and the funding source
- Budget availability is visible at request time, not discovered at payment time
- Approval chains adapt to amount thresholds per organisation policy
Quotes and comparison without email archaeology
Most donor frameworks require competitive quotes above a threshold. When RFQs go out from the system and vendors submit through a portal link, the comparison table builds itself — prices, terms, and delivery side by side, with the selection rationale recorded. Six months later, the auditor sees exactly why vendor B won.
Purchase orders and receipt
The approved comparison becomes a purchase order; the purchase order becomes the reference for receiving goods and matching invoices. Three-way matching (order, receipt, invoice) closes the loop and catches the classic frauds: paying for undelivered goods, quantity short-falls, and price drift between quote and invoice.
Vendors as managed records
A vendor list in a spreadsheet is a liability. Vendor records with registration data, documents, and transaction history support due diligence requirements and let procurement teams see performance across orders — who delivers late, who disputes, who quotes and never wins.
- Self-service vendor registration through a public portal
- Document collection (registration, tax, bank details) attached to the record
- Order and bid history per vendor
Frequently asked questions
Can vendors submit quotes without an account in our system?
Vendors receive a tokenised public link to submit their quote and clarifications, so participation does not require workspace accounts.
How are procurement thresholds handled?
Approval chains are configured per organisation and can branch by amount, so a $200 purchase and a $20,000 tender follow appropriately different paths.
Does procurement check grant budgets?
Yes — purchase requests reference a grant and budget line, making available budget visible before approval and keeping committed spend traceable.
What audit trail exists for a completed procurement?
The full chain is preserved: request, approvals with actors and timestamps, RFQ, received bids, comparison, selection, purchase order, and receipt records.
Keep reading
What is NGO ERP?
NGO ERP explained: how grant-centric resource planning differs from generic business ERP, which modules matter, and how to evaluate a system for your organisation.
Grant management software
How grant management software works: awards, budget lines, amendments, spend control, and donor reporting — and what to look for when choosing a system.
NGO HR and payroll
HR for grant-funded organisations: employee records, leave workflows, attendance, and payroll with salary allocation across grants. What NGO HR software must do differently.