Total Procurement Intelligence Will Get You To Good
How Can TPI Get your Organization to Good? TPI’s vendor-neutral consultants are your key to success
‘Getting to Good’ isn’t just a catch-phrase. It’s our focus, our successful process for clients of all sizes.
It works across industries and regions. Our experience has taught us to take a deep into four areas to help our clients find money and save money as we advance.
STEP ONE: RECOVER FUNDS IMMEDIATELY
Cost Recovery
Refund and Recover business expenses paid in error that have not been researched or paid out of habit
Tax Recovery and Avoidance
Tariff Review
Rider Opt-out
Existing Contract(s) Review and Pricing Competitiveness
STEP TWO: REDUCE COMMODITY SPEND
Recommend current spend across commoditized products and suggest applicable changes
Energy Use and Rate Analysis for:
Electricity
Natural Gas
Quick ROI non-physical solutions
Non-physical conversions for Telecommunications and Merchant solutions
STEP THREE: IMPLEMENT EFFICIENCY MEASURES
Review physical implementation of cost-cutting or cost-avoiding measures
Energy Storage Solutions
LED lighting
Demand Response/Demand Management
Co-generation & Solar Solutions
Intermediate to Long-term ROI
Physical solutions/conversions
STEP FOUR: ONGOING ACCOUNT MANAGEMENT
The goal is to ‘get to good!’
Proactive management of your commodity-based spends
Continue to recommend solutions to increase savings or avoid costs over time
What's Next?
As a TPI client, your organization will have a dedicated Client Account Manager (CAM) who will be operationally and functionally in charge of all your Account(s) details.
Our CAM will continually be watching the market for you and advising of positive next steps.
GET STARTED Ready to Look at Your Energy Spend? Reach out:
SCHEDULE YOUR ENERGY AUDIT
TPI’s energy procurement experts will guide you to the best fit to strengthen your business and its energy budget, assist in scaling your growth as your energy demands expand, keeping your goals top of mind.
Wondering what it all means? Check out the Energy Glossary of common energy terms, via the EIA.gov