SPAs, whether you define them as special pricing agreements or ship and debit initiatives, are a way to simultaneously capture business and ensure, perhaps improve, gross margin … if you manage them right.
But like most things, the devil is in the details and, with SPAs, because the administrative process touches so many people within a distributor, many distributors do not capture all of the expected margin, and they lose cashflow. What should be a revenue and profit driver becomes a margin drain.
Scott Sinning has lived SPA / ship and debit management and designed systems and governance processes to ensure distributors optimize this opportunity. In fact, the name of his company, MarginMax Partners, explicitly says what his goal is … to partner with distributors to maximize their margins.
Each month he shares ideas with our readers on how to optimize profitability. This month he is helping us think about optimizing SPAs.
Rethinking SPA Optimization
SPAs are simultaneously one of the most valuable margin levers in distribution and one of the least governed.
In this context, SPA refers to Special Price Agreements which are ship-and-debit programs between manufacturers and distributors that support stock sales growth and align channel pricing. Distributors invest significant time negotiating favorable terms with suppliers, then leave the realization of those terms to a fragmented process that spans multiple functions but belongs to none of them.
After serving as Vice President of Pricing Strategy for a national distributor that included responsibility for SPA governance, and now partnering with distributor executive teams, I’ve come to think of SPAs as an enterprise margin system with major impact on profitability and cash flow. For many distributors, SPAs influence a substantial portion of gross margin and tie up significant working capital.
Even modest improvements can be worth millions of dollars for a larger distributor. One regional distributor we worked with freed up $2,000,000+ in cash flow by addressing root causes buried in their supplier reconciliation process, where claims had aged well beyond ninety days. Once they applied focused attention and established processes to minimize claim rejections, margin recovery followed quickly.
SPAs as an Enterprise Margin System
The SPA lifecycle follows a familiar sequence:
- terms are negotiated with suppliers
- systems are updated
- inventory is purchased at into-stock cost
- products sell
- claims are submitted
- reconciliations occur
- settlement follows
- margins are recorded, and
- the cycle begins again with renewals.
The rule is simple: if you don’t govern the full lifecycle, you’ll negotiate margin upstream and give it back downstream.
Operational Complexity Behind SPAs
Simple on paper, but complex in practice. There is no industry standard for managing SPAs at scale. The process involves a high volume of details, data mismatches between distributor and manufacturer systems, and manual handoffs between teams. Each function performs its role: sales negotiates agreements, procurement manages supplier relationships and costs, pricing supports execution, finance reconciles claims and collects settlement, and IT operates the systems. Yet in most organizations, no single executive owns margin realization and cash flow performance across the full SPA lifecycle.
The cash flow impact compounds the issue. Because SPAs are ship-and-debit agreements that apply to stocked inventory, distributors pay the higher into-stock cost up front and recover the rebate later. If reconciliation cycles stretch due to claim rejections, the difference between into-stock cost and the lower SPA cost ties up cash until settlement credit is received.
There is also a pricing execution dimension to consider.
SPA optimization creates value only if part of the negotiated cost advantage is retained. In cost-plus pricing, lower costs automatically translate into lower prices and thinner margins unless leadership makes an intentional commercial decision. Margin retention is not automatic. It must be governed.
As I wrote in a recent ElectricalTrends article (another service of Channel Marketing Group), Where Margin Is Hiding, margin leakage in distribution rarely occurs in dramatic moves. It accumulates through process gaps, manual handoffs, and limited visibility across functions.
Governance means executive accountability across the entire lifecycle, from agreement negotiation through settlement and renewal, supported by defined cross-functional handoffs, communication standards, claim cycle expectations, and visibility into reconciliation balances and working capital impact.
It also means giving leadership a consolidated view of the process rather than isolated departmental metrics. When executives can see the entire flow, opportunity can be measured, and responsibilities properly assigned. The result is not only measurable financial results, but also greater sales team satisfaction and productivity.
AI and Automation as Enablers
As distributors rethink SPA governance, new automation and AI capabilities can handle much of the manual friction that has historically plagued the SPA process, from claim negotiation through final settlement.
AI-driven tools can identify a variety of SPA leakage elements: expiring agreement alerts, gaps in negotiations, and analytics-driven opportunities to strengthen manufacturer discussions. For example, AI-assisted pricing tools can detect when a cost update from SPA wasn’t passed through to a new sell price, flagging it for review and correction to plug profit leaks.
Both established software providers and emerging AI solutions are helping teams monitor agreements, reconcile claims, and identify margin recovery opportunities that previously required extensive manual effort. For teams that have historically spent hours chasing claim status and manually reconciling balances, the time savings alone justify the investment, even before counting the margin recovered.
These tools give leadership visibility into issues early enough to intervene before leakage compounds. Many distributors are now evaluating these solutions, building use cases, starting small, and proving the value.
Turning Visibility into Margin Performance
Start by putting a number on it. Quantifying the margin recovery and working capital opportunity is usually what moves SPA governance from a back-burner conversation to a funded initiative.
SPAs cut across sales, pricing, procurement, finance, operations, and IT, which makes them an enterprise margin system rather than a departmental task. A concrete way to embed accountability is establishing a quarterly cross-functional SPA review where sales, procurement, pricing, and finance leadership examine new opportunities, reconciliation balances, claim rejection trends, and margin realization against negotiated targets.
With defined processes, accountability, and executive visibility, margin performance becomes measurable and manageable. It’s often one of the most underleveraged sources of margin improvement already sitting inside the business.
About the Author
Scott Sinning advises wholesale distributors on pricing strategy and margin performance. As former Vice President of Pricing Strategy at Graybar, he led pricing, software, and analytics initiatives while working through the execution challenges described in this article. He’s a regular contributor to Channel Marketing Group. Learn more at www.marginmaxpartners.com.
Things to Think About
- Who should be responsible, overall, for SPAs within your business? Arguably it should be a CFO who has MBOs as this is process, margin recovery, and cash flow. The execution is process driven?
- Set goals. Do you know what percentage of your stock business is driven by SPAs? Your stock profitability? Do you know what you want it to be?
- Are you using SPAs strategically within your sales organization to capture business?
- Have you reviewed your “strong” stock customers who are not on a SPA? Could / should they be (and there are benefits to having a pricing agreement that is specific to you … it makes it harder for competition to meet the number without manufacturer approval.)
If you’re seeking to improve profitability or want to see if you can improve cash flow, perhaps an audit of your SPA process should be considered?


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