OakMorel did not set out to build a forensic intelligence firm. It started with one contractor, one problem, and one pattern that wouldn't leave us alone.
The contractor knew something was wrong. Business owners always do. They have a sixth sense built from years of making their margins work — from knowing exactly what a job should cost, what a supplier should charge, what a relationship should look like when it's running clean. They feel the drift before they can name it. And when they bring it to their supplier, they get the same four answers every time. It's the economy. It wasn't on the quote. It's a different size. That's just what it costs now.
The discrepancy always favors the supplier. Every single time. And the business owner — the one running jobs, managing people, keeping the lights on, some months barely clearing enough to start the next one — is left holding an invoice that doesn't add up and no instrument to prove why.
We decided to build the instrument.
We took the invoices. We took the quotes. We ran them against each other and immediately hit the first wall — the quotes were expired. Prices referenced, items listed, agreements implied — but the dates had lapsed and nothing had been renewed. First finding before we even started. Get the quotes current. Get the expiration dates extended. That alone changes the negotiating position.
Then we looked at coverage. What percentage of invoiced items had a corresponding quoted price? The contractor told us to expect ten, maybe twenty percent off-quote — that's just how it works in the field. Jobs move fast. Things come up. You order what you need in the moment and you sort it out later. Ten to twenty percent of line items with no agreed price was acceptable to them. It was the cost of doing business.
It came back over one hundred percent. Every single invoiced item had no agreed price. The supplier had been setting every number unilaterally, for every order, across every job.
We fixed the quotes. Rebuilt the baseline. And then we found the morel.
What a business owner quotes at the start of a job and what they actually order in the field are two different things. That gap is real and it's normal — jobs evolve, materials run short, substitutions happen. What is not normal is when the substitution always runs in one direction. When the item the supplier delivers is never cheaper than the quoted item. When it is always a grade up, a size increment larger, a brand tier higher — different enough that there is no agreed price, similar enough that nobody questions it at delivery.
The supplier's best friend is an empty shelf. No quoted item in stock means they deliver whatever they have — and charge whatever they want. And if the SKU is different, if the brand name doesn't match, there is nothing to hold them to. They know it. They count on it.
That sentence is why OakMorel exists. The supplier wasn't embarrassed. They weren't surprised. They were describing their business model — counting on the complexity of their own invoicing, the volume of line items, the pace of operations, and the simple fact that nobody on the other side of the transaction had the time or the instrument to check.
The larger companies we have worked with tend to have cleaner books. Not because they are more honest — because they have procurement teams, AP departments, people whose entire job is to hold vendors accountable. They have the instrument. Smaller businesses don't. A contractor running fourteen jobs. A bar owner managing inventory through the rush of a Saturday night. A restaurant operator whose supplier shows up at six in the morning and needs a signature before the prep cook has finished the mise en place. That's who gets taken. And that's specifically who we built this for.