Workday Strategic Sourcing — the rebranded Scout RFP platform — is priced on sourcing event volume, supplier seats, and category tier. Workday is still integrating Scout's commercial model with the broader FINS price card, which creates negotiation leverage that won't last forever. We benchmark, restructure, and negotiate Workday Strategic Sourcing across every cycle.
Workday Strategic Sourcing came in through the 2019 Scout RFP acquisition and still runs on commercial models that don't fully align with Workday's broader FINS pricing. That gap is leverage. We map your sourcing event volume, supplier seat usage, and category mix against benchmark data from peer organizations, then push back on Workday's automatic uplift assumptions. The levers below consistently move Strategic Sourcing deals.
Workday tiers Strategic Sourcing by annual event volume. Most clients overestimate their year-one volume and over-license. We right-size based on rolling 12-month actuals.
Supplier seats are licensed per invited supplier, not per active supplier. We rewrite the licensing to active-supplier basis where possible — typically a 30-45% reduction.
Workday categorizes sourcing events by complexity tier (simple RFI to multi-round RFP). Tier creep is endemic. We audit and re-categorize.
Strategic Sourcing and Procurement should renew on one date with one consolidated benchmark. Separately, Workday plays them off each other.
Workday Strategic Sourcing is on the discount curve where 0% annual uplifts are achievable. Most FINS modules are not.
Customers on legacy Scout RFP commercial terms have negotiation rights that don't appear in the standard Workday paper. We identify and preserve them.
Scoped deliverables. Predictable cost. You know the fee before we start. Benchmarks, redline strategy, and live deal support across every Strategic Sourcing SKU, integration, and professional services line item.
Zero upfront cost. Our fee is a percentage of verified, documented Strategic Sourcing savings over baseline. No savings, no fee. Aligned incentives, end-to-end.
The supplier seat audit caught $310K of over-licensing in the first hour. We were paying for 1,400 suppliers when only 480 had logged in inside 24 months.
Scout RFP's original pricing was event-based with simpler supplier seat math. Workday has been migrating customers onto its broader FINS-style commercial model — bundled, volume-tiered, with annual uplifts. Legacy Scout customers often have grandfathered terms worth preserving.
Workday tiers by completed sourcing events, but the definition of 'completed' is contractually fuzzy. We negotiate explicit definitions, exclude cancelled or test events, and cap counting at the actual go-live date for net-new functionality.
Yes. The two modules are functionally adjacent and should be on one renewal date. Separately, Workday's deal desk uses them as cross-leverage in successive cycles.
Both are possible. Standalone negotiations work well if you have a credible alternative platform (Coupa, Ivalua, GEP) on the table. Bundle negotiations work well when the FINS renewal is the larger deal and Sourcing can ride alongside.
Strategic Sourcing implementations run lighter than Core FINS — typically $80K-$240K depending on scope. We negotiate flat-rate, change-order capped, with explicit supplier onboarding scope.
Sourcing engagements typically price between 15-22% of first-year savings, capped. The baseline is your current Strategic Sourcing subscription plus event-related fees and PS spend.
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