Priced per engagement, not per seat.
One model: a $2,000 monthly base covers every site and every user, with a set volume of sourcing runs included. Run more, and usage is billed on top. Either way, you pay for sourcing, not for seats.
Then one plan: a floor, not a ceiling.
The base fee puts your whole team on one guardrailed engine. Above the included volume, each sourcing run is billed as usage, so cost grows only in proportion to the bids you actually run.
- Bid and Scout runs for the whole team
- Included run volume, set with your real bid count during the POC
- Predictable, one line item
- No per-seat rationing, everyone sources through it
- Billed only for runs beyond the base
- Scales in proportion to the bids you run
- Every added bid carries its own competitive savings
- Very large multi-site footprints scoped as custom
Want the math on your own volume? Send us your bid count and we'll model it. Talk to us.
A $2,000 floor. Growth only when your bids grow.
The base makes the engine available to everyone, so no one rations who gets to source through it. Above the included volume, you pay per run. Neither part charges per seat, because rationing the people who do the buying defeats the purpose.
A paid pilot gets used. A free trial gets forgotten.
The three-month onboarding is where your team runs real bids on real categories, so the budget conversation is grounded in your own savings, not a slide.
Real categories
We source the categories you pick, on your approved suppliers.
Real numbers
Savings measured against your prior prices and quote averages.
Two clean line items
A one-time onboarding cost and a monthly platform fee, ready for your budget cycle.
No headcount argument
The case is per-event savings and admin removed, not heads cut.
What buyers ask first.
Why not per seat?
Per-seat pricing limits who sources through the tool, which defeats the purpose. The base fee covers every site and user, so all buying runs through one guardrailed engine.
Why a paid POC instead of a free trial?
Free trials get treated as side projects. A paid 90-day pilot means your team actually runs real bids, and you see real savings before you commit to the platform.
What does the $15,000 onboarding include?
Spend and supplier-master onboarding, approved-supplier import, live three-bid runs on your categories, and a baseline savings report.
What counts as usage, and when does it start?
The base includes a set volume of sourcing runs, agreed during the POC using your real bid count. Runs beyond that are billed as usage. Very large multi-site footprints are scoped as a custom engagement.
Start with a paid pilot. Prove it on your own spend.
Three months, your categories, your suppliers. Then decide on the platform fee with your real bid volume in hand.
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