Senior (5-8 years)

Senior Procurement Change Manager

This isn't just about rolling out new software; it's about helping people actually *use* it and understand *why* it matters. You'll be the person on the ground, making sure our big procurement changes stick. Think of it as being the bridge between the fancy new system and the day-to-day reality of our teams. You're not just managing a project; you're managing the human side of a big shift in how we buy things. It's a critical role, honestly, because without proper change, even the best tech just gathers dust.

Job ID
JD-PRCM-SRPRCM-003
Department
Procurement
NOS Level
Level 6-7 (Senior Professional)
OFQUAL Level
Level 6-7
Experience
Senior (5-8 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

As a Senior Procurement Change Manager, you'll own the end-to-end change management for specific, significant workstreams within our larger procurement transformation programmes. This often means taking a new sourcing module or a particular regional rollout from initial design right through to full adoption. You're not just following a plan here; you're designing it, adapting it, and making sure it actually lands with our people. Your work directly impacts whether our new procurement systems deliver on their promise – things like saving money, making buying easier, or reducing risk. If you do your job well, our teams will embrace the new ways of working, see the benefits, and genuinely improve how they operate. If it goes poorly, well, people will just find ways around the system, and we'll lose all those promised gains. The tricky part? You'll face resistance, sometimes from unexpected places. It's about understanding those concerns and finding practical ways to address them. The reward, though, is seeing tangible improvements in how our business runs and knowing you've made a real difference to people's daily jobs.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: Your success directly translates into successful adoption of new procurement processes and systems. This means real cost savings, better supplier relationships, and a much more efficient buying experience for everyone. Get it wrong, and we'll have wasted a lot of money on tech that no one actually uses, and people will be frustrated.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: System Adoption Rate
  2. Desc: Percentage of target users actively using the new procurement system or module.
  3. Target: >85% of target users within 90 days post-go-live
  4. Freq: Weekly for the first 90 days, then monthly
  5. Example: For the new Sourcing module rollout, 88% of our Category Managers were logging in and creating RFQs weekly by the 90-day mark, compared to a baseline of 20% on the old system.
  6. Metric: Reduction in Post-Go-Live Helpdesk Tickets
  7. Desc: Decrease in support requests related to the new system or process after launch.
  8. Target: 50% reduction in relevant helpdesk tickets within 60 days post-go-live
  9. Freq: Monthly
  10. Example: After launching the new P2P system in the UK, helpdesk tickets related to 'how to create a requisition' dropped from 150 a week to 60 a week within two months, showing our training worked.
  11. Metric: Go-Live Readiness Score
  12. Desc: Overall score from pre-launch assessments covering training completion, communication effectiveness, and stakeholder buy-in.
  13. Target: >90% across all business units for your assigned workstream
  14. Freq: Pre-go-live (typically 2 weeks before launch)
  15. Example: Our Q2 Contracts module rollout scored 92% on readiness, with high marks for user training attendance and positive feedback from key department champions.
  16. Metric: Training Effectiveness Scores
  17. Desc: Average feedback scores from training sessions and post-training quizzes.
  18. Target: >4.5/5 for training sessions; >80% pass rate on quizzes
  19. Freq: Per training session, then aggregated quarterly
  20. Example: The 'How to use the new PO system' webinar series consistently got 4.7/5 from attendees, and 85% passed the short quiz, showing people actually learned something.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Stakeholder Trust & Engagement
  2. Desc: How well you build relationships and get people on board, even the tricky ones.
  3. Evidence: You're proactively consulted on new project phases. People come to you with concerns *before* they become problems. You get positive feedback from project sponsors about your ability to manage difficult conversations and secure buy-in. You're seen as a trusted advisor, not just a 'change enforcer'.
  4. Metric: Quality of Change Deliverables
  5. Desc: Are your communication plans, training materials, and impact assessments clear, comprehensive, and actually useful?
  6. Evidence: Deliverables are consistently clear, well-structured, and require minimal revisions from project leads. Training materials are practical and well-received by users. Your change impact assessments accurately predict challenges and inform effective mitigation strategies. You catch the small errors before they become big headaches.
  7. Metric: Proactive Problem Solving
  8. Desc: Your ability to spot potential issues with adoption or resistance early and suggest solutions.
  9. Evidence: You're bringing solutions to your manager, not just problems. You identify emerging patterns of user resistance from helpdesk tickets or sentiment analysis and propose targeted interventions. You adapt your approach when something isn't working, rather than just sticking to the original plan.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Making a Tangible Impact
  2. Daily: You'll get a kick out of seeing adoption rates climb, hearing positive feedback from users, or knowing that your training materials actually helped someone do their job better. It's about seeing your work directly translate into real-world improvements.
  3. Motivator: Solving Complex People Problems
  4. Daily: You enjoy figuring out why people are resisting a change and then designing a clever way to overcome that. It's like a puzzle, but with human behaviour at its core. Every day brings a new challenge in getting people on board.
  5. Motivator: Continuous Learning & Growth
  6. Daily: The world of procurement and change management is always evolving. You'll be constantly learning new tools, new frameworks, and new ways to influence behaviour. This role offers plenty of scope to deepen your expertise and try new approaches.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. If you need things to be perfectly logical all the time, or if you get easily frustrated by human irrationality and resistance, you'll probably struggle. You'll rerun the same analysis three times because stakeholders keep changing the question. The 'urgent' request that disrupted your Thursday will get deprioritised on Friday. You'll build a beautiful communication plan that never gets fully executed because the business moved on to the next 'urgent' thing. If you need to see every piece of work make it to production exactly as you designed it, you'll struggle here.

Common Frustrations

  1. The 'Lip Service' Stakeholder: The department head who agrees with everything in your steering committee meeting and then tells their team, 'Just keep using the old spreadsheet, this new system is a mess.'
  2. Being the 'Process Police': Despite your best efforts to be a strategic partner, you are often perceived as the bureaucratic enforcer trying to take away people's corporate cards and autonomy.
  3. The 'Necessary Evil' Budget: Your change management budget (especially for training and communications) is often the first to get cut when the project runs into technical overruns, even though it's the most critical factor for adoption.
  4. Users Hacking the System: Spending 18 months implementing a state-of-the-art P2P system, only to find users have discovered a loophole to bypass it within the first week of go-live.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A perfectly predictable day-to-day routine – expect curveballs.
  2. Direct line management responsibility (though you'll mentor juniors).
  3. A quiet, heads-down analytical role – this is very people-focused.
  4. Projects where everyone is immediately on board and enthusiastic about change.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, varied nature of change management projects can be really engaging, offering constant new challenges and problems to solve, which can suit a high-energy, curious mind.
  2. The need to quickly pivot between different tasks – like drafting a comms plan, then running a workshop, then analysing data – can be a strength, as you're rarely stuck on one monotonous task for too long.
  3. The focus on creative problem-solving and finding novel ways to overcome resistance can be highly motivating for those who thrive on innovation.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Keeping track of multiple, often shifting, stakeholder requirements and project deadlines can be tough. We can help with structured project management tools (like Jira/Asana) and regular check-ins to keep things on track.
  2. Managing the detail-oriented aspects of change plans (e.g., tracking every communication touchpoint) might require extra support. We encourage using digital tools and templates to streamline these processes.
  3. Working in an open-plan office or highly collaborative environment might be overstimulating. We offer noise-cancelling headphones, quiet zones, and flexibility for focused work from home when needed.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong visual and spatial reasoning skills are often associated with dyslexia, which can be a huge asset in designing clear process maps, user journey flows, and engaging training materials.
  2. Excellent problem-solving abilities and 'big picture' thinking can help you quickly grasp complex organisational challenges and devise creative change strategies.
  3. Often very good at verbal communication and storytelling, which is crucial for influencing stakeholders and making the 'why' of change resonate.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Drafting detailed written communications and documentation can be time-consuming. We encourage the use of AI drafting tools (like Grammarly or generative AI for first drafts) and offer proofreading support.
  2. Reading long, dense project documents or technical specifications might be challenging. We can provide access to text-to-speech software and encourage using visual summaries where possible.
  3. Ensuring accuracy in written reports and data entry is important. We use templates, checklists, and peer review processes to catch errors and ensure high-quality outputs.

Autism Positives

  1. A strong ability to focus deeply on tasks and identify patterns can be invaluable for conducting thorough change impact assessments and anticipating areas of resistance.
  2. A logical, systematic approach to problem-solving and process design can help in structuring robust change plans and ensuring clarity in communications.
  3. Often brings a unique perspective and an ability to challenge assumptions, leading to more effective and user-centric change solutions.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex social dynamics and unspoken organisational politics can be draining. We provide clear expectations for communication, offer direct feedback, and support you in building stakeholder relationships.
  2. Dealing with unexpected changes or ambiguous situations can be difficult. We aim for clear project structures, provide advanced notice of changes, and offer support in adapting to new requirements.
  3. Sensory input in a busy office environment might be overwhelming. We offer flexible working arrangements, quiet spaces, and noise-cancelling headphones to support a comfortable working environment.

Sensory Considerations

Our main office is typically an open-plan environment, which can be quite lively with regular team discussions and calls. That said, we have quiet zones, offer noise-cancelling headphones, and actively support hybrid working. You'll spend a fair bit of time in meetings, both virtual and in-person, and facilitating workshops. We're pretty flexible about how you manage your working environment to suit your needs.

Flexibility Notes

We're big believers in flexibility. This role can be done largely hybrid, with a couple of days a week in our London office for team collaboration and workshops. We're happy to discuss specific arrangements to make sure this role works for you.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Senior Procurement Change Manager (L3)
  2. Responsibilities: Lead the change management workstream for a specific procurement module (e.g., Contracts, Supplier Relationship Management) or a major regional rollout, taking it from initial planning through to post-go-live support.
  3. Design and implement comprehensive communication plans tailored to different stakeholder groups, making sure everyone understands the 'WIIFM' and what's expected of them. This means drafting emails, creating presentations, and running town halls.
  4. Develop detailed change impact assessments, identifying exactly who's affected by a new process or system and how. You'll then use this to build targeted training and support strategies.
  5. Organise and run engaging workshops with business users and procurement teams to gather feedback, co-create solutions, and build excitement for upcoming changes. You'll need to be good at getting people talking and agreeing.
  6. Mentor 1-2 junior Procurement Change Analysts, providing guidance on their tasks, reviewing their deliverables, and helping them navigate tricky stakeholder situations. Think of it as being their go-to person for advice.
  7. Build and maintain a 'network of champions' within the business – finding those influential people who can advocate for the change and help others adopt the new ways of working. This is about building relationships.
  8. Analyse adoption data (e.g., system usage, helpdesk tickets, survey results) to identify areas of resistance or confusion, and then propose practical interventions to address them. It's not just about planning; it's about reacting and adapting.
  9. Supervision: You'll typically have bi-weekly check-ins with your Lead or Head of Transformation for strategic alignment and to discuss any major blockers. For your assigned workstreams, you'll have full autonomy on execution, but you'll consult on strategic decisions or significant deviations from the plan.
  10. Decision: You'll make most technical and tactical decisions within the scope of your assigned workstream (e.g., selecting communication channels, designing training content, prioritising change activities). You'll recommend but not approve budget allocations above, say, £10K. For significant timeline changes or scope shifts, you'll consult with your Lead and relevant project sponsors.
  11. Success: Your workstream successfully launches with high user adoption rates, minimal post-go-live disruption, and positive feedback from key stakeholders. Your junior mentees are growing and delivering quality work. You've proactively identified and mitigated key areas of resistance.

Decision-Making Authority

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Tool: Stakeholder Sentiment Analysis

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Tool: Change Resistance Prediction

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Tool: Personalised Training Content Generation

Benefit: Feed a generative AI tool your master process document and a specific user persona (e.g., 'Marketing Manager,' 'Lab Technician'). It'll then create tailored quick-reference guides, FAQs, and even video scripts that speak directly to their needs, cutting down content creation time significantly.

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You'll typically use 2-3 core AI tools, often integrated into your existing platforms. Typical tool investment
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12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

Beyond the technical stuff, there are some core skills that are just essential for getting things done in a complex organisation. These are the behaviours that make you effective, no matter what project you're working on.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

This is where the specific 'how-to' knowledge comes in. These are the methodologies, processes, and tools you'll be using day-in, day-out to actually deliver change.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

We're looking for someone who isn't new to change management; you've already got a few significant projects under your belt. You're ready to step up and own a substantial chunk of a transformation programme, bringing your experience to bear on real-world challenges. This isn't your first rodeo, and you're ready for more responsibility.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

These aren't just buzzwords; they're practical skills that will make you significantly more effective in driving successful change. We'll support you in developing these, but we also expect you to take initiative and explore them yourself. It's about staying curious and always looking for better ways to do things.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 5-8 years of dedicated experience in change management roles, with a significant portion of that time spent on large-scale business transformations, ideally within a procurement, finance, or operations context. We're looking for someone who has genuinely led change for specific workstreams or modules, not just supported them. You should be able to point to specific projects where you designed communication plans, ran workshops, and drove adoption metrics. Experience working with major enterprise software rollouts (like SAP, Oracle, Coupa, Ariba) is a big plus.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

The skills you'll build as a Senior Procurement Change Manager are highly transferable. You could move into change management roles in other industries (e.g., financial services, healthcare, manufacturing) or into broader business transformation roles within our own company. The ability to manage the human side of change is universally valuable.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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