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Title tag: Supply Chain Course Cost & Requirements (SA)
Meta description: Supply chain management course requirements, costs and where to study in South Africa. Compare short vs accredited, online vs in-house. Request a quote.
Most supply chain management courses in South Africa have no formal entry requirements beyond literacy, numeracy and Grade 10-12 — short skills programmes accept any working professional, while accredited NQF qualifications may ask for a Matric and relevant experience. Costs run from roughly R3,000-R8,000 per delegate for a short course to R15,000-R40,000+ for full accredited qualifications, with in-house team rates quoted per group. Here is what actually drives the decision.
If you are an HR, L&D or operations manager buying training for a procurement, warehousing or logistics team, the real question is not “what does it cover” — it is what level do we need, what will it cost us, and how do we run it without pulling the whole team off the floor. This guide answers that, then points you to a quote.
The honest answer for most corporate buyers: very little stands between your staff and a place on a course. Requirements depend entirely on the level of training, not the subject.
| Course type | Typical entry requirement | Who it suits |
|---|---|---|
| Short course / skills programme | Grade 10-12, basic literacy & numeracy, ideally already working in the role | Upskilling current procurement, stores, warehouse or buying staff |
| Accredited unit-standard / NQF programme | Matric (NQF 4) usually; some accept RPL for experienced staff | Staff who need a formal credential or SETA-recognised outcome |
| NQF 5-6 qualification (higher certificate / diploma level) | Matric plus relevant work experience; sometimes a prior qualification | Supervisors and managers moving into SCM leadership |
For in-house corporate training, entry requirements are largely a non-issue — you are training people already doing the job. The practical “requirement” is simply that delegates work in or alongside the supply chain function so the content lands. Where a team member lacks Matric but has years of experience, Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) can open the door to accredited routes.
This is the decision that drives both cost and value, so get it right before you compare prices.
A quick rule of thumb: if you want capability, a short course usually wins on speed and ROI. If you want a credential — for a career path, a SETA outcome, or to strengthen your skills-development scorecard — go accredited.
Not sure which competencies your team is missing? Read what a supply chain management course covers before you choose a level.
“Supply chain course cost” has no single answer because the price is built from several drivers:
Indicative ranges in the South African market:
| Format | Indicative range (ZAR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Short course, per delegate (public) | R3,000-R8,000 | 1-5 days, certificate of completion |
| Accredited skills programme / unit standards | R8,000-R18,000 | SETA-aligned, assessment included |
| Full NQF qualification (5-6) | R15,000-R40,000+ | Multi-month, formal credential |
| In-house team training | Quoted per group | Best per-head value for 6+ delegates |
These are general market indications, not a BOTI price list — your actual figure depends on the mix above. For a firm number tied to your team size and goals, request a quote.
Cost tip for L&D buyers: accredited training counts toward the BBBEE skills-development element, which targets 6% of the leviable amount spent on developing Black employees. The Skills Development Levy you already pay (1% of payroll) can also be partly recovered through mandatory and discretionary grants where training is SETA-aligned. Treat this as general guidance and confirm specifics with your skills development facilitator (SDF) or SETA.
For corporate teams, the delivery model matters as much as the syllabus.
Most BOTI clients training a department choose in-house or live online precisely because it minimises time off the floor and maps the training to their own suppliers, systems and compliance environment.
Buyers searching “where to study supply chain management South Africa” generally choose between:
For a business buying training for staff, a corporate provider is almost always the right fit: you are upskilling people who already do the job, on your timeline, without enrolling them in a multi-year qualification. BOTI’s supply chain and procurement training is a practical, facilitator-led skills programme; delegates receive a BOTI certificate of completion (this is not an accredited qualification). With 450 courses and clients including Sasol, Glencore and the City of Johannesburg, BOTI runs supply chain and procurement training in-house, live online or as scheduled courses nationwide — JHB, Cape Town, Durban, Pretoria and remote. Need accredited training? Ask about BOTI’s QCTO/SETA-accredited programmes in management, business administration and project management.
This sits inside our wider supply chain & procurement training offering, which spans sourcing, warehousing, logistics and the tender and compliance side of the function.
Not all “accredited” claims are equal, and price alone is a poor guide. Before you sign off a training budget, download our free Corporate Training Provider Comparison Checklist + sample RFP — it gives you the exact questions to ask on accreditation, facilitator credentials, customisation and pricing, plus a ready-to-send RFP template so you can compare quotes like-for-like.
What are the requirements for a supply chain management course?
For short courses and in-house corporate training, requirements are minimal — basic literacy and numeracy and, ideally, that delegates already work in or alongside the supply chain. Accredited NQF programmes typically ask for Matric (NQF 4); higher qualifications add relevant work experience. Experienced staff without Matric can often qualify via Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL).
How much does a supply chain course cost in South Africa?
As a general indication, short public courses run roughly R3,000-R8,000 per delegate, accredited skills programmes R8,000-R18,000, and full NQF qualifications R15,000-R40,000+. In-house team training is quoted per group and usually offers the best per-head value once you have six or more delegates. Request a quote for a firm figure.
Where can I study supply chain management in South Africa?
You can study at universities and universities of technology (degrees / diplomas), TVET and private colleges, or with corporate training providers like BOTI. For a business upskilling a team, a corporate provider offering short, practical or in-house courses is usually the fastest, most practical route.
Is BOTI’s supply chain course accredited?
BOTI’s supply chain and procurement training is a practical, facilitator-led skills programme; delegates receive a BOTI certificate of completion, not an accredited qualification. If your team needs an accredited credential, ask about BOTI’s QCTO/SETA-accredited programmes in related areas such as management, business administration and project management.
Can BOTI train our whole team on-site?
Yes. BOTI delivers supply chain and procurement training in-house at your premises, live online for distributed teams, or as scheduled public courses — in Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, Pretoria and remotely nationwide.
Tell us your team size and what you need to improve, and we will tailor a programme and a firm quote.
Request a quote or book a 15-minute callback for in-house or live-online supply chain training — and download the free Corporate Training Provider Comparison Checklist + sample RFP to compare providers with confidence.
Related reading: Supply chain & procurement training (South Africa) · What a supply chain management course covers · Procurement & SCM compliance (PFMA/PPPFA)
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