Buyers usually do not replace an FM supplier because of one dramatic failure. They replace them because the same frustrations keep repeating: weak supervision, unclear ownership, poor communication, slow follow-up and too little confidence in what is really happening on site.
That matters more than ever. Government contract management guidance now puts clear accountability, defined roles, documented plans and effective handover at the centre of good supplier management, while HSE continues to highlight how poor control around cleaning and workplace safety creates real risk. Slips and trips remain the single most common cause of major injury in UK workplaces, and HSE notes that cleaning activity itself can create those hazards if it is not properly managed.
A reactive supplier does not always look bad in a proposal. Often, they look fine until the contract is live. Then the gaps start to show.
1. You are always chasing, instead of being updated
If your team has to keep asking what is happening, whether issues were fixed, or who is actually dealing with a problem, the supplier is not operating with enough structure.
A well-run FM service should not depend on the client constantly prompting action. It should have clear ownership, regular communication, visible escalation and reporting that tells you what has happened, what is being done next and where the risks sit. Public sector contract management guidance is explicit that accountability, roles, governance and documented management plans must be clear.
What buyers feel:
“We should not have to manage the supplier this closely.”
2. Standards depend too heavily on one person
If performance lifts only when a particular supervisor is on site, or drops the moment that person is absent, you do not have a structured service model. You have a fragile one.
Structured suppliers build standards into the contract through audits, checks, escalation routes, clear responsibilities and repeatable site disciplines. Reactive suppliers often rely on individuals firefighting problems after they appear.
What buyers feel:
“This works when the right person is around, but not as a system.”
3. Mobilisation felt rushed, vague or incomplete
Most FM problems do not start three months into the contract. They start in mobilisation.
If the handover was messy, site information was incomplete, staffing felt uncertain, reporting was not ready, or early promises did not translate into live control, that is a warning sign. Government guidance says mobilisation and transition should be planned properly, with continuity considered early and contract management arrangements clearly defined.
What buyers feel:
“We never really felt the contract landed properly.”
4. Problems are fixed temporarily, not properly
Reactive suppliers tend to treat symptoms instead of causes.
A missed clean gets re-done. A complaint gets answered. A guard is swapped. A waste issue gets cleared. But the same issue comes back because nobody has fixed the underlying control problem.
Structured suppliers look beyond the single incident. They ask why it happened, what failed around it, what needs tightening and how recurrence will be reduced.
What buyers feel:
“We keep revisiting the same problems in different forms.”
5. Reporting looks busy, but tells you very little
Many FM reports are full of activity and low on meaning.
If reporting is mostly attendance logs, generic updates or traffic-light summaries without context, it may create the impression of control without actually giving you confidence. Buyers need reporting that helps them understand performance, trends, unresolved issues, corrective action and whether standards are being sustained.
That matters particularly where safety, hygiene, security, waste control and compliance are involved. HSE’s guidance on violence, aggression, slips and trips all points back to the need for risk assessment, reporting, review and stronger controls, not just reactive response.
What buyers feel:
“We are receiving updates, but not real visibility.”
6. Security, cleaning and support services feel disconnected
Where security says one thing, cleaning says another, and operational support sits somewhere in between, buyers lose confidence quickly.
This is one of the clearest signs of a reactive supplier model. Services may exist, but they are not being managed as one joined-up operating picture. That creates friction, duplicated effort, slower escalation and more blind spots.
A more structured FM partner brings cleaning, security, waste, front of house, pest control, mobilisation and specialist support into a clearer management approach, so the client sees one controlled service story rather than multiple moving parts.
What buyers feel:
“We are buying several services, but it does not feel coordinated.”
7. You cannot easily evidence what the supplier has actually controlled
The final warning sign is often the most serious one.
When a buyer cannot clearly evidence what has been checked, corrected, escalated, trained, sanitised, secured, disposed of or improved, confidence starts to fall. In some contracts that becomes more than a frustration. It becomes a risk issue.
This is especially important in areas like QHSE, security and end-of-life asset handling. For example, when devices contain storage media or business data, disposal is not just a waste question. It becomes a custody, data-security and governance issue too, and both secure sanitisation and compliant end-of-life handling matter.
What buyers feel:
“If we were audited tomorrow, would we be comfortable with the evidence?”
What a structured FM supplier looks like instead
A structured supplier is easier to work with because they make control visible.
That usually means:
- clearer mobilisation and startup planning
- defined responsibility across cleaning, security and support services
- visible supervision, audits and KPI checks
- stronger escalation and faster corrective action
- reporting that helps buyers evidence performance
- support that fits around compliance, governance, ESG and contract assurance
- specialist control where it matters, including secure IT disposal and data erasure
In other words, the contract feels managed, not just staffed.
Why this matters now
HSE’s latest figures show 40.1 million working days were lost in Great Britain due to work-related illness and workplace injury in 2024/25, while an estimated 689,000 incidents of violence at work were recorded in the same period. In that context, weak supervision, vague escalation and reactive service management are not minor operational flaws. They are buyer risks.
The TPMG view
At TPMG, we believe buyers are right to expect more than a visible result.
They should expect clearer ownership, stronger structure, better communication and proof that standards are being managed properly across cleaning, security and wider support services.
Because when a supplier is structured, the service feels different.
Calmer. Clearer. Easier to trust.
Talk to TPMG about cleaning, security, mobilisation, support services and secure IT disposal built around clearer control, visible standards and stronger buyer confidence.