Vrocure Blog · Technology
Why Spreadsheets and Email Break Down as Procurement Scales
By The Vrocure Team · 2026-06-18 · 6 min read
There is nothing wrong with a spreadsheet. For your first handful of suppliers and a dozen orders a year, email and Excel are the right tool — fast, free, and familiar. The problem is that the system that got you to ten orders is the same system trying to run a hundred, and the cracks are not obvious until something falls through one.
Failure point 1: version drift
The quote comparison lives in sourcing-final-v3-REALLY-final.xlsx on someone’s desktop. A supplier revises their price; the update lands in an email, not the sheet. Now the number you are negotiating against is wrong, and nobody knows which version is canonical. Multiply that across every open RFQ.
Failure point 2: the audit trail evaporates
Who approved this PO? Why did we pick the second-cheapest supplier? When did the drawing revision change? The answers are scattered across inboxes — and when the person who sent the email is on leave or has left, they are gone. When a customer or auditor asks for the paper trail, you are reconstructing history from memory.
Failure point 3: quotes you cannot compare
Three suppliers reply in three formats: one PDF, one email body, one attached spreadsheet with different line items. Someone spends an afternoon normalising them into a comparison — and normalising is exactly where errors and bias creep in. You are not comparing suppliers; you are comparing your transcription of them.
Failure point 4: no separation of who sees what
Forwarding an RFQ by email means forwarding everything — including, sometimes, another supplier’s pricing or your customer’s identity. There is no structural wall between what a supplier should see and what they should not. One misdirected reply-all can leak a margin or a relationship.
Failure point 5: nothing tells you what needs attention
A spreadsheet is passive. It will not tell you a quote deadline passed, a PO was never acknowledged, or an invoice arrived that does not match what you ordered. You find out when a part does not show up. The system has no memory of what it is waiting on.
What to replace it with
You do not need a heavyweight ERP to fix this. You need a shared system of record where the RFQ, the drawing, every bid, the PO, and the invoice live against one order — with a built-in audit trail, structured bids you can compare on one screen, and rules about who sees what.
- One source of truth per order, not a folder of attachments
- Structured RFQs so every bid is comparable by construction
- A real audit trail — who did what, when, automatically
- Role-based visibility so suppliers never see each other or your client
- Active status that surfaces what is overdue or unacknowledged
That is precisely the gap Vrocure fills — RFQ to invoice in one workspace, free to start, with suppliers on the platform at no cost. The spreadsheet did its job. It just was not built to scale with you.