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How Local Councils Can Reduce Contractor and Services Spend

How Local Councils Can Reduce Contractor and Services Spend
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Written by:
Trace Insights
Publish Date:
Mar 2026
Topic Tag:
Procurement

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Contractor and services spend is typically the largest discretionary cost line in a council budget — and in most councils, it is the least actively managed. Roads maintenance, building maintenance, grounds and parks, waste services, IT services, professional and consulting services, community services — for most councils, external contractor spend represents 40–60% of total operating expenditure.

It is also, in most councils, highly fragmented. Different departments procure similar services independently. Historical supplier relationships persist without being market-tested. Contract management is inconsistent. Spend is poorly visible across the organisation. The result is a cost base that, with structured management, is typically 10–20% reducible without any reduction in service quality or delivery.

This article sets out how councils can approach contractor and services spend reduction systematically — and what the most effective interventions look like.

Why Contractor Spend Is Hard to Manage in Local Government

Before covering solutions, the constraints deserve acknowledgment.

Political sensitivity. Many council contractor relationships involve local businesses — the local civil contractor, the local landscaping company, the long-standing IT provider. Procurement decisions that appear to disadvantage local suppliers attract councillor attention and community criticism, regardless of the value for money outcome. Managing this sensitivity while still making commercially sound procurement decisions requires both analytical rigour and clear communication.

Procurement capacity. Running competitive tender processes for all significant contractor spend requires procurement time and expertise. Most councils have limited procurement capacity — meaning that even where competitive tension would produce savings, the capability to create it is constrained.

Regulatory friction. Procurement compliance requirements in local government — advertising, evaluation panels, record-keeping — create process overhead that makes frequent re-tendering impractical for smaller spend categories. Councils often maintain incumbent contractors on rolling arrangements rather than bearing the overhead of re-tendering.

Continuity requirements. Some contractor relationships carry continuity value — institutional knowledge, mobilisation investment, relationship capital — that has genuine economic worth. The savings from switching to a cheaper alternative can be offset by transition costs and performance dip during mobilisation.

These constraints are real. The response to them is not to accept incumbent contractor spend as unmanageable — it is to design a contractor spend management approach that works within them.

A Framework for Contractor Spend Reduction

Step 1: Spend visibility. The starting point is always spend data. Most councils do not have a clear, current picture of what they are spending with external contractors and service providers, broken down by category, supplier, department, and contract status. Building this visibility — through spend data extraction from the financial system, classification, and analysis — typically takes two to four weeks and invariably surfaces surprises: duplicate suppliers providing the same service to different departments at different prices, contracts that have expired and are operating on informal extensions, spend with suppliers who have never been competitively tendered.

Step 2: Categorise and prioritise. Not all contractor spend is worth the same management attention. A spend categorisation that groups contractor spend into logical categories — civil maintenance, building maintenance, grounds, waste, IT, professional services, community services — and ranks them by spend value identifies where the effort should be directed. The top five to eight categories by spend typically represent 70–80% of total contractor spend. These are where category strategies and active management will deliver the most return.

Step 3: Assess contract status and market risk. For each major spend category, assess the current contract arrangements (term, renewal options, pricing mechanism, performance obligations), when they are next due for review, and whether the current pricing is likely to be competitive with the market. This assessment identifies the near-term priorities — categories where contracts are due for renewal, where pricing hasn't been tested for more than three years, or where there are known supply market developments that might provide competitive opportunity.

Step 4: Design and execute category strategies. For each priority category, develop a category strategy — a documented plan for how the spend will be managed over the next three to five years. The strategy should address: the sourcing approach (competitive tender, panel, sole source, joint procurement with other councils), the supplier relationship model, the contract structure and term, and the performance management framework. Execute the strategy through competitive market engagement where appropriate.

Step 5: Active contract management. Once contracts are in place, manage them. Track performance. Conduct regular reviews. Ensure pricing remains competitive — either through indexation mechanisms built into contracts, or through periodic market benchmarking. Don't let contracts drift from their commercial terms.

The Highest-Value Interventions

Maintenance services panel consolidation. Where councils are procuring maintenance services (civil, building, grounds, electrical) through a combination of standing panels, expired contracts, and ad-hoc engagement, consolidating to a well-structured, competitively tendered panel typically delivers 8–15% cost reduction on that spend. The mechanism is simple: competitive tension drives pricing, and volume consolidation improves leverage.

Professional services spend rationalisation. Most councils' professional services spend — consulting, legal, engineering advisory, planning — is highly fragmented across many providers without coordinated management. A professional services category review and rationalisation (developing preferred provider arrangements for the most frequently used service types, with negotiated rate schedules and performance expectations) typically produces 10–20% cost reduction on that spend.

Joint procurement with neighbouring councils. For councils in regional or metropolitan clusters, joint procurement for common categories — fuel, plant hire, office consumables, IT infrastructure, waste services — produces scale that individual councils cannot achieve alone. The procurement overhead of a joint tender is shared; the volume benefit accrues to all participants. In NSW, Local Government Procurement (LGP) and similar bodies in other states facilitate this, but not all council spend is covered by existing panels, and direct council-to-council collaboration is underutilised.

Make vs. buy analysis for insourced services. Some services that councils currently outsource could be delivered more cheaply in-house at current volumes — and vice versa. A structured make vs. buy analysis for significant service categories, informed by accurate internal cost data and market pricing, occasionally produces significant savings through insourcing. More commonly it confirms that outsourcing remains the right model — but at a price that needs to be renegotiated.

Demand management and scope discipline. Before the procurement lever, the demand lever. Are councils purchasing the right volume of the right services? Over-specified maintenance standards, scope creep in professional services engagements, and services that were designed for a past operating model and haven't been reviewed for currency are all common sources of demand inefficiency. Scope review as part of contract renewal routinely identifies 5–15% of spend that can be eliminated without service impact.

A Note on Local Industry Preference

Many councils have explicit or implicit policies that favour local suppliers. This is legitimate — councils have an economic development mandate as well as a procurement mandate, and local purchasing has genuine multiplier effects in regional economies.

The key is that local preference should be explicit, bounded, and applied consistently — not an informal practice that undermines probity. A well-designed local preference policy specifies the price premium that is acceptable to support a local supplier over a non-local alternative, documents how it is applied in evaluation, and records the decisions made under it. This protects both the council's probity obligations and its legitimate community economic development objectives.

Where local preference policies are applied inconsistently or informally, they create both procurement risk and perverse outcomes — protecting incumbent suppliers who are local but no longer competitive, rather than genuinely supporting the local economy.

How Trace Consultants Can Help

Trace Consultants helps Australian councils identify and capture cost reduction opportunities in contractor and services spend — from spend diagnostics through to tender management and category strategy implementation.

Spend diagnostics: We analyse council contractor and services spend, identify the highest-value reduction opportunities, and develop a prioritised programme of interventions.

Category strategy and tender management: We develop category strategies for major spend areas and provide hands-on support for competitive tender processes — specification development, evaluation, negotiation.

Contract management frameworks: We design contract management processes and performance frameworks that protect the value established at tender over the life of the contract.

Since inception, Trace Consultants has averaged a 12:1 return on fees across our client engagements — measured as quantified client benefits against total consulting fees. For a council investing in procurement improvement, that's a business case that requires no faith.

Explore our Procurement services →Explore our Government & Defence sector expertise →Speak to an expert at Trace →

Ready to turn insight into action?

We help organisations transform ideas into measurable results with strategies that work in the real world. Let’s talk about how we can solve your most complex supply chain challenges.

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