Kraljic Matrix — Supplier Segmentation | Metricon by Alle’s ClinX
Procurement → Kraljic Matrix
Procurement · Strategy

Kraljic Matrix

Segment your supplier base by risk and profit impact. Know exactly where to negotiate hard and where to invest in partnership.

Supply Risk × Profit Impact → 4-Quadrant Strategy
Interactive Calculator
Position Your Supplier

Input Parameters

Profit Impact (0–10)
This category as % of your COGS or total cost base
10 = failure halts operations; 1 = easily tolerated
Supply Risk (0–10)
Globally accessible, qualified alternatives
1 = many regions; 10 = single country / region
Context

Quadrant Classification

quadrant
Profit Impact Score
Supply Risk Score
Annual Spend
Recommended Strategy
Enter inputs to see strategy.
Mathematics
How Scores Are Calculated
Profit Impact = COGS%×0.4 + Quality×0.35 + Substitutability×0.25  |  Supply Risk = (10−Suppliers)×0.3 + Geography×0.3 + LeadTimeVol×0.2 + (10−FinStab)×0.2
PI
Profit Impact
COGS%, quality, substitutability
SR
Supply Risk
Suppliers, geography, lead time, stability
Q1
Leverage
High PI, low SR — negotiate hard
Q2
Strategic
High PI, high SR — partner
Q3
Bottleneck
Low PI, high SR — secure supply
Q4
Routine
Low PI, low SR — automate
Supplier Position Map
Your supplier plotted against all four quadrants
Score Breakdown
Profit impact vs supply risk component weights
Auto-Generated
Procurement Brief
Run the calculator to generate your brief.
Deep Dive

The 2×2 That Changed Procurement Forever

Strategic Sourcing8 min read

In 1983, Peter Kraljic published a nine-page article in Harvard Business Review that transformed how organisations think about purchasing. His central insight was simple but radical: not all spend categories deserve the same procurement strategy, and treating them identically wastes resources on low-risk items while systematically under-protecting high-risk ones. The Kraljic Matrix is the framework that operationalises this insight — and it remains the most widely used strategic sourcing tool in existence.

The Two Dimensions

Profit impact measures how significantly a category affects the organisation’s financial performance — through volume, quality influence on the end product, or growth impact. Supply risk measures how difficult the category is to source: number of available suppliers, switching cost, technical complexity, geographic concentration, and lead time. Plotting every category on these two axes reveals where strategy should focus — and exposes the misallocations that are costing real money.

“The single biggest mistake in procurement is applying a strategic sourcing process to a commodity item, and a commodity process to a strategic item. Kraljic tells you which is which.”

The Four Quadrants — What Each Demands

Strategic items (high profit, high risk) demand partnership. These are the categories where supply disruption could halt operations and where supplier relationships must be managed at executive level. Long-term contracts, joint development programmes, and supply continuity assurance are the appropriate tools. Leverage items (high profit, low risk) demand competitive tendering — you have buying power, use it. Run RFPs, consolidate volume, and switch suppliers when pricing drifts.

Bottleneck items (low profit, high risk) demand security of supply above all else. Pay the premium, hold safety stock, qualify alternative sources even at higher cost — the operational disruption from a stockout dwarfs any price saving. Routine items (low profit, low risk) demand efficiency. Automate purchasing, use procurement cards, implement catalogues, and minimise the management overhead per transaction.

The Most Common Mistakes

Organisations consistently over-invest in strategic sourcing for leverage and routine categories — running six-month RFP processes for stationery. They simultaneously under-invest in bottleneck management — discovering single-source dependencies only when a supplier fails. Mapping the entire portfolio annually, not just at contract renewal, prevents both errors. Categories migrate between quadrants as markets change, as the organisation grows, and as technology shifts supply dynamics.

Using the Matrix as a Resource Allocation Tool

The Kraljic Matrix is ultimately a time allocation framework. Strategic items deserve 60–70% of category management time despite representing, typically, 20–30% of categories. Routine items should consume almost no strategic time — automate them and move on. Many procurement functions discover, on first mapping, that they have the allocation precisely backwards.

The Origin

1983
Peter Kraljic, Harvard Business Review

Quadrant Strategy

Strategic
Partnership — long contracts, joint development, exec sponsorship
Leverage
Competition — RFPs, volume consolidation, switching
Bottleneck
Security — safety stock, dual sourcing, pay premium
Routine
Efficiency — automate, P-card, catalogue, reduce touch

Portfolio Migration

Categories move between quadrants over time. A sole-source component becomes dual-sourced (risk falls). A commodity item becomes critical when supply concentrates. Review the matrix annually, not just at contract renewal.

Key Insight

If more than 30% of your spend is classified ‘Strategic’, either your risk assessment is too liberal or your supplier base needs diversification. Most organisations should have 5–15% of spend in the strategic quadrant.

Common Questions
FAQ
Leverage (high profit impact, low supply risk): negotiate hard, use competitive bidding. Strategic (high profit, high risk): invest in partnerships and long-term contracts. Bottleneck (low profit, high risk): secure supply above all else, build safety stock, develop alternatives. Routine (low profit, low risk): automate purchasing, minimise transaction cost.
Profit impact = degree to which this category affects your cost structure, quality, or growth. Proxies: spend as % of COGS, criticality to product quality, availability of substitutes. High profit impact categories are those where price movement or quality failure directly and significantly affects your margins.
Supply risk = difficulty of sourcing from alternatives if your current supplier fails. Proxies: number of qualified global suppliers, switching costs, lead time, geographic concentration, raw material availability, supplier financial health. A category with one qualified supplier in one country has extreme supply risk.
For strategic suppliers: yes. Transparency about your strategic intent builds better partnerships. For leverage suppliers: generally no — knowing you see them as interchangeable weakens their position. For bottleneck: engage on risk mitigation collaboratively. For routine: automate the relationship.
Annually for all categories, and immediately after any supply disruption, major market change, or shift in business strategy. COVID-19 reclassified many ‘routine’ categories as ‘strategic’ overnight. Organisations that had mapped their supply risk responded faster.