It's 6 PM on a Friday. The HVAC is down at a location in Texas and you need to dispatch a vendor. You check your spreadsheet for the preferred contractor in that region. Their insurance certificate expired two months ago. You call the backup. No answer. You try the one you trust from another region, but they don't service that area. So you start Googling.
This isn't a rare scenario. For most multi-location FM teams, this is just another week.
Facility vendor management across multiple locations breaks down because most teams are managing vendors through relationships, memory, spreadsheets, and email. That works at five locations. At 300, it creates cost leakage, compliance exposure, and inconsistent service quality that nobody can see until it's already a problem. The vendors aren't necessarily bad. The system around them is.
This article breaks down what goes wrong, what good vendor management actually looks like for multi-location teams, and how to start fixing it without adding another full-time job to your plate.
If you've been managing vendors across multiple locations for any length of time, some of this will sound familiar. These aren't theoretical problems. They're the ones that show up in your inbox on a random Wednesday, in your invoices at the end of the quarter, or in a liability claim you didn't see coming.
No standardized SLAs
Different regions, different vendors, different expectations. Or worse, no documented expectations at all. You can't hold a vendor accountable to a response time standard that was never written down. And when there's no standard, "fast" means whatever the vendor decides it means.
No visibility into performance
Without tracking response time, completion time, callback rate, and cost per work order by vendor, you have no basis for comparing contractors or negotiating renewals. You're relying on gut feel and the occasional complaint from a site manager. That's not vendor management. That's vendor hope.
Compliance exposure you can't see
Insurance certificates, contractor licenses, W-9s, background checks. All expiring on different dates for different vendors across different regions. If a vendor without current insurance causes damage or injury at your location, the liability doesn't fall on them. It falls on you. And the worst part is you won't know the certificate was expired until after something goes wrong.
This is especially critical in industries with strict credentialing requirements, like healthcare, where a vendor without proper documentation shouldn't be on-site at all.
Invoices you can't validate
Without connecting invoices to completed work orders, you're paying for work you can't verify. Duplicate invoices, inflated hours, charges for work that wasn't completed. None of this is visible when invoices come in through email and get approved in a spreadsheet. It's not that vendors are dishonest. It's that without a system to match invoices against actual work, there's no accountability on either side.
Regional fragmentation
Each region develops its own vendor list, its own rates, and its own informal processes. Nobody has a portfolio-level view of what's happening. There's no volume leverage for pricing negotiations. And there's no way to identify that one region is paying 30% more per work order for the same trade as the region next door. This plays out across every industry that relies on multi-location maintenance. Restaurant and QSR operators deal with different vendor networks in every market. Retail and convenience store chains face the same fragmentation across hundreds of locations. Healthcare organizations add credentialing complexity on top of it. The problem isn't industry-specific. It's a scale problem.

Good vendor management isn't about finding better vendors. It's about building a system around the vendors you already have that gives you visibility, accountability, and consistency across every location. Here's what that looks like in practice.
1. Standardized SLAs by trade and priority level
Every vendor relationship has documented expectations. Response time, resolution time, communication requirements. Configured by trade, by priority tier, and by region. Not in a contract sitting in a filing cabinet. In the system, attached to the work order workflow, so when a vendor misses a window, you know about it the same day.
Umbrava ties SLA tracking directly to work orders, so response and resolution times are measured automatically against the standards you set. There's no manual tracking and no end-of-month spreadsheet review. The data builds itself as work gets done.
2. Performance tracking tied to work orders
Every work order assigned to a vendor should automatically track response time, completion time, and cost. Over time, this builds a scorecard that tells you which vendors are performing and which are costing you. No manual compilation required.
This is where real-time reporting makes the difference. If you can't pull a report that shows vendor response time, first-time fix rate, and cost per work order by vendor, by location, and by trade, you're negotiating renewals blind. And your vendors know it. Umbrava's reporting connects vendor performance data directly to work order history, so every renewal conversation starts with actual numbers, not anecdotes.
3. Automated compliance monitoring
Insurance certificates, licenses, and credentials stored in the system with expiration dates. The platform flags expirations automatically. If checking a contractor's insurance requires someone to open a spreadsheet and manually compare dates, it won't happen consistently. It needs to be automatic, and it needs to be visible before a non-compliant vendor gets assigned to a work order.
Umbrava stores vendor compliance documents with expiration tracking built in, so your team isn't relying on calendar reminders or quarterly audit spreadsheets to catch gaps. And because it's built into the same interface your team already uses for work orders, it doesn't add another tool or another workflow to manage. For teams running outsourced maintenance management across dozens of locations, that matters.
4. Invoice-to-work-order matching
Every invoice should tie back to a completed, verified work order. If the work order wasn't closed, if the cost doesn't match the scope, or if the invoice doesn't correspond to any work order at all, it gets flagged before payment. This is how you stop paying for work you can't verify. Umbrava links invoices directly to work orders so your team can validate charges against actual completed work before anything gets approved.
5. Portfolio-level vendor benchmarking
Compare the same trade across regions. Is your HVAC vendor in the Southeast outperforming the one in the Midwest? Are you paying significantly more per work order in one region than another? You should be able to answer this from a dashboard, not a quarterly spreadsheet exercise.
When vendor performance, compliance, and cost data all live inside the same platform as your work orders and assets, you get a live picture of every vendor relationship across your entire portfolio. That's what Umbrava is built to do. Vendor management isn't a separate module or an afterthought. It's part of how every work order is assigned, tracked, and closed.
You don't need to overhaul your entire vendor management process in a week. Here's how to start building structure without turning it into a project that never gets finished.
Start with your top 10 vendors by spend
You don't need to profile every contractor on day one. Identify the 10 vendors who get the most work orders and the most spend. Build their profiles first: contact info, SLAs, insurance documentation, trade, and region coverage. That alone gives you a foundation to build on.
Set one SLA metric and enforce it
Don't try to track 15 KPIs right away. Start with response time, the time from work order creation to vendor acknowledgment. It's the most visible metric and the easiest to measure. Once you have a baseline, add resolution time and cost per work order.
Centralize compliance documents now
Even if everything else stays manual for a while, get insurance certificates and licenses into one place with expiration dates. This is a liability issue, not just an efficiency issue. If nothing else changes tomorrow, at least know which of your vendors are currently compliant and which aren't.
Build vendor tracking into your CMMS during implementation, not after
If you're implementing a new platform or switching from one that isn't working, vendor profiles, SLA configurations, trade assignments by region, and compliance fields should all be part of the onboarding process. Retrofitting vendor management six months after go-live is significantly harder than building it in from the start.
You don't have to do this alone
If that list feels like a lot to take on alongside everything else on your plate, that's kind of the point. Most FM teams don't have the bandwidth to build out vendor profiles, configure SLAs, centralize compliance documents, and set up tracking while also running day-to-day operations. Umbrava's onboarding team handles this during implementation. They configure your vendor profiles, set up SLA tracking by trade and region, and build compliance monitoring into the system before you go live. Your team doesn't inherit a setup project. They inherit a system that's already working.
Think back to that Friday evening HVAC call. The scramble to find a vendor, the expired insurance, the backup who didn't answer? That's what vendor management looks like when it runs on memory and spreadsheets. It's exhausting. And it doesn't have to be your normal.
Managing vendors across 300 locations isn't about finding better contractors. It's about having the visibility to know which ones are performing, which ones are compliant, and which ones are costing you more than they should. When every work order tracks vendor performance automatically, when compliance documentation is monitored by the system instead of by someone remembering to check a spreadsheet, and when you can benchmark any vendor against any other vendor across your entire portfolio, vendor management stops being a fire drill.
Umbrava connects vendor performance, compliance, and cost tracking directly to your work order workflow across every location. It's not a separate tool. It's not an add-on. It's how work gets assigned, tracked, and closed. So the next time the HVAC goes down, you already know who to call, that their insurance is current, and the work order is created in a few taps.