Our last post continued our review of Managing Indirect Spend, a new book by Joe Payne and William (Bill) Dorn of Source One that is the culmination of everything they have learned while doing nothing but Strategic Sourcing, primarily on Indirect Spend, since 1992 -- before it was cool. Specifically, it discussed the chapter on Market Intelligence, which is critical to the success of any sourcing initiative and one of the most important tools in any sourcing professional's toolkit. In this post, we review the other non-software tools at a sourcing professional's disposal that were discussed in Bill and Joe's tome on Managing Indirect Spend.
The major tools at a sourcing professional's disposal when conducting market research can generally be classified into the following categories:
Another tool at the organization's disposal for a successful sourcing project is a spcialized consultancy or Procurement Services Provider (PSP). A PSP with the tools, consulting experience, and skills in the right categories can jump-start an organization's indirect sourcing efforts and get significant returns months, if not years, earlier. The key is to find the right one that is incentivized to do the job. As such, the organization should probably look for contingency providers that only get paid when hard dollar savings are realized. Providers that get paid based on man-hour effort often have no incentive to get the organizatio the best deal possible as they are paid regardless and providers that get paid based on estimated savings have no incentive to make sure the savings are actually realized. And while contingency providers that get paid on hard dollar savings may ask for a (significantly) higher percentage, it's better to pay 30% of realized savings and realize 80% of the estimated savings than to pay 15% and only realize 40% of the estimated savings. In the first case, the organization still nets 56% of the savings in its pockets while, in the second case, it only nets 34% of the savings.
However, be sure to follow the best practices outlined by the authors if engaging a (contingency) PSP, or your organization might not get what it bargained for. Specifically, don't engage an organization that
Finally, it's important to note that if the organization uses an electronic sourcing tool, it's doubly important to remember what not to do or the tool will blow up the event faster than you can read this post. Tools don't replace the necessary human contact and it is vital that the team does not neglect to:
There are a lot of tools at a Supply Management organization's disposal for conducting market intelligence and managing indirect spend, but they have to be used wisely.
At this point SI is going to take a short break, but next month it will continue with Part III of it's review of Managing Indirect Spend and discuss some examples from the field.
It's an interesting question, especially when the U.S. doesn't have the capacity to support global operations like Apple with their manufacturing needs. There's only 83 U.S. cities with enough population to support a Foxconn-size manufacturing plant, and for the vast majority of these, only if a significant amount of the population could staff the factory. Even in New York, some estimates state that 7% of the working population would have to work in the same factory to support iPhone production. That's seven percent! Chances are that not even 0.7% of the population would be qualified without extensive training.
Based on this, despite what some articles might suggest, current generation manufacturing can not return to the US. However, that doesn't mean that next generation manufacturing, focused primarily on producing specialized high-end technology products for the medical and engineering professions, couldn't be the backbone of the US economy in the decade ahead.
Consider this recent item in Industry Week on Arrrow Gear -- A Case Study in How to Improve the U.S. Economy. According to the article, Arrow Gear increased its workforce by 35% in the face of the worst recession since the Great Depression by creating products used in high-end, high-priced systems that were being exported. A manufacturer of high precision gears for a wide range of commercial and aerospace applications, it accomplished this feat by investing millions of dollars into its state-of-the-art facility.
This would suggest that a focus on specialty products for the aerospace, health, and (green) energy sectors, in particular, could allow manufacturing to return, in at least a limited extent, to the U. S. But only if the U.S. takes a lead before another country steps up to the challenge.
Any differing thoughts?
In Part I we began our review of Managing Indirect Spend, a new book by Joe Payne and William (Bill) Dorn of Source One that is the culmination of everything they have learned while doing nothing but Strategic Sourcing, primarily on Indirect Spend, since 1992 -- before it was cool. And as SI noted in its last two posts, clocking in at 422 pages, this book is an incredible handbook for anyone who wants to get a handle on indirect spend, which has increased in organizations across the board since outsourcing and right-sizing rose to fame in the 1990s. Part I reviewed the process. Here, in Part II, we will review the tools.
The first "tool" that we are going to review is Market Intelligence. Market Intelligence can be defined as a branch of market research, involving collation and analysis of available and relevant information and data on specific market. The information that is gathered varies based on the type of product or service that your organization is purchasing and how critical that product or service is to your overall supply chain and sales of your end product. However, regardless of the product or service being researched, there are critical types of market intelligence that will always need to be collected, including intelligence on global market conditions, benchmarking data, and market pressures. For starters, a buyer needs to understand the forecasting that suppliers use to prepare for competing in a global market. For example, even though a product might be purchased for domestic usage from a domestic supplier, that supplier may be making plans based on forecasting for markets outside of your home country, because if demand for the products grows significantly in foreign markets, or if currency exchange rates shift so that it is more favourable for that supplier to sell internationally rather than domestically, it may cause a shortage off domestic supply, or higher prices.
Bill and Joe are right when they state that world class organizations spend a lot of time constantly (re)evaluating their supplier chains to identify risks and non-competitive pricing. This is how they get ahead. However, it takes a lot of time to collect intelligence, and even more time to separate bad intelligence from good. Once the global market conditions are understood, the next thing the buyers will have to sift through is benchmarking data. This can be difficult in a new, or closed, marketplace if suppliers are overprotective of their data. The best way to get this data is often by working with sales and marketing. It may sound crazy that sales and marketing should be the first stop, but when one considers that all they do is benchmark their competition every day to help with daily sales efforts, they are the perfect guides to get the market intelligence team on their way.
Market pressures are also important. Not only do they impact your organization, but they impact your suppliers' organizations as well -- and these market pressures are critical. If the supplier is cash strapped, in danger of a labor shortage, or located smack-dab in the middle of an uprising-in-the-making, that supplier could be a high risk. And since suppliers are typically an organization's biggest supply management risk, this is important intel. (Other big risks are impending government regulations, cultural shifts, and natural disasters.)
Of course, the big question on everyone's mind is how do you succeed with such a hard task? Dedication is key, but so is insuring that each of the components of success are there, including:
It's great advice. Stick around for Part II.2 where we will dive into tools for gathering data and expediting the sourcing process and complete our review of Part II of Managing Indirect Spend.
Will Supply Management ever be the "Go-To" organization? It should be, but it many organizations it still doesn't have C-Suite visibility. That's why I found the fact that SIG recently published an article on Reinventing Procurement as the "Go-To" Organization to be quite interesting because the average organization is not yet ready for Supply Management to have the role it deserves.
SI agrees with the author who states that procurement is a vital component of any large company. It supports every department and employee in the company; it engages with every service provider the company does business with; it executes contracts that help manage the risk to the company; it commits sometimes significant financial obligations on behalf of the company; it leads supplier diversity programs; it has a holistic view of the spend of the company; and it has the ability to manage consumption. No other department has as much reach both internally and externally. But yet, it is still not seen as the "go-to" department.
Why not? The author makes some good points. Challenges include:
But these challenges can be overcome. The author recommends that an organization starts:
1. At the Top.
First, the organization must obtain a strong leader (if it doesn't already have one) with strong relationship, communication, and business skills to forge relationships between business units.
2. With a Mission.
A vibrant procurement organization needs a clear set of meaningful (and measurable) goals. Specifically, the procurement team needs to know what it stands for, what it is trying to accomplish, and what to communicate to the business units and service providers.
3. That Gets C-Suite Attention.
After all, a consistent executive message that declares procurement as a core resource for achieving the business imperatives will go a long way to build confidence from all realms of the enterprise.
4. That Empowers People.
Motivated individuals want to own their outcomes and be recognized for their contributions. The same motivated individuals that will achieve Supply Management success for your organization.
Collectively this transformation will help to create a new corporate reputation for Supply Management - which will start to spread when the organization become[s] known as the group to call when someone needs to get something done. And if this happens,
And Supply Management will have taken the first step.
In Parts I.1 and I.2 we began our review of Managing Indirect Spend, a new book by Joe Payne and William (Bill) Dorn of Source One that is the culmination of everything they have learned while doing nothing but Strategic Sourcing, primarily on Indirect Spend, since 1992 -- before it was cool. And as SI noted in its last two posts, clocking in at 422 pages, this book is an incredible handbook for anyone who wants to get a handle on indirect spend, which has increased in organizations across the board since outsourcing and right-sizing rose to fame in the 1990s. (And if you think otherwise, download SI's free eBook white-paper on Spend Visibility: An Implementation Guide, dive into your spend, and see just how much of it is indirect.)
Today we're going to conclude our review of Part One -- The Process, as well as review the last chapter in Part Two, on building stakeholder engagement (which, in the doctor's view, is as much process as tool), and discuss implementation, stakeholder engagement, continuous improvement, and, finally, what not to do if the organization wishes to conduct a successful sourcing event.
As Bill and Joe correctly point out, the vast majority of savings opportunities are squandered because there is
However, monitoring is a challenge because it will require the end users that are the ones using the category to do most of the monitoring -- and any appeals about organizational benefits may fall on deaf ears unless a message that resonates with the end users is given. For example, instead of talking savings numbers, which no one believes (because they were never historically achieved), talk jobs. How many jobs might the initiative save? Could it save their job(s)?
And, the organization will have to break down the traditional customer / supplier relationship view that still pervades the organization. Since most innovation will often come from outside the organization, the supplier must be viewed as a collaborator, and not an antagonist only out to get the most money from the organization for the least service possible. Treated with respect, most suppliers will rise to the challenge. Suppliers often have great ideas to reduce energy consumption, downtime, freight costs, and process slowdowns if asked. Plus, they are constantly monitoring the market to identify ways to outperform their competition. Tap into that. It's a great way to start a continuous improvement initiative.
Of course, all of this will require stakeholder engagement. A stakeholder can be defined as any person, group or department that has influence in a spend category or is influenced directly or indirectly by that spend category. Stakeholders aren't just end users or category owners. Depending on the project, they are also finance departments, management, shareholders, customers, and even marketing teams. Not only do stakeholders have to buy in for implementation success, but they are a key source of information. They are the often the best source of information on the current supplier, alternate suppliers on the market, the range of spend in the category, similar categories that may be leveraged with the supplier(s), and future requirements. Plus, stakeholders can provide the following value:
Finally, once there is supplier and stakeholder engagement, make sure the organization doesn't screw up and do any of the following:
All in all, Part One of Managing Indirect Spend contains some great advice that every indirect category manager should heed. Our next post will tackle Part II - The Tools. Continue to stay tuned.
Even though I was browsing the HBR Bogs, I was still a little surprised to see a post titled Five Steps to Long Term Growth because, to be honest, thanks to Wall Street, I didn't think anyone knew what Long-Term Growth meant anymore. And I'm being serious here. The focus on quarterly earnings calls has gotten so intense that it's almost obscene -- the nosedive a stock takes in the market after a bad earnings call is typically so severe that one would think the world is going to end.
Not only did this intense focus on short-term profit cause the end of the famed research labs in the 1990s (like Bell Labs, Xerox Parc, Texas Instruments -- and yes, I know that Bell, PARC, and TI still exist, but what we have today is not what we had then), two major market busts in the naughts (as everyone tried to IPO at unsustainable valuations), and the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs (because people cost money and it's more profitable to operate at skeleton crew levels and make everyone, in fear for their jobs, work unpaid overtime than actually be responsible and use the obscene amounts of profit the corporation is making to actually hire the headcount the organization should have), but it pretty much spelled the end of any thought to growth plans beyond the next year in the corporate boardroom - at least as far as I can see.
Of course, it is this lack of focus on the long term that captures everything that is wrong with the marketplace today. Once long term growth and sustainability take centre stage, short term profit becomes unimportant, Wall Street is told to go <expletive> themselves, people become as important as product, and the market changes -- for the better. If you would like the market to change for the better, and become successful beyond your wildest dreams when it does, you can start by taking Vijay Govindarajan's advice and take the following Five Steps to Long Term Growth.
1. Decide What You Are Playing For
Are you playing for the fat <expletive>s on Wall Street? Or are you playing for yourself and your stakeholders. If the latter, then you have to take a stand and do something about it. No one is going to do it for you.
2. Get Everyone Speaking the Same Language
Once you decide you're playing for the long term, the next thing you have to do is something different. Growth means fostering transformational or breakthrough innovation. This will require identifying value propositions that will expand your business into new markets with new advantages.
3. Imagine Your Future
If you want sustainable growth, you must have a sense of what the future will be, what it will require, and how you will win. Then you apply your breakthrough or transformational innovation to achieving that vision.
4. Align Your Actions With Your Intentions
As Def Leppard said in a fit of Pyromania, it's Action, Not Words. You have to remember that your people are used to hearing a lot of big talk about great new initiatives that never come to pass and without some action behind them, they will assume that your words are just another corporate fad that will be forgotten as time passes. If you say you are going to eliminate all traces of phosphate from your products, assemble teams to do it. If you say you are going to create 50 jobs with a new initiative, start hiring!
5. Do It!
Growth is hard work requiring strategy, judgment, and leadership. It involves risk. It involves you. You will have to keep doing it. Day in. Day out. Day over. Day under. Day torn asunder. And back to day in.
In Part I.1 we began our review of Managing Indirect Spend, a new book by Joe Payne and William (Bill) Dorn of Source One that is the culmination of everything they have learned while doing nothing but Strategic Sourcing, primarily on Indirect Spend, since 1992 -- before it was cool. And as SI noted in its last post, clocking in at 422 pages, this book is an incredible handbook for anyone who wants to get a handle on indirect spend, which has increased in organizations across the board since outsourcing and right-sizing rose to fame in the 1990s. (And if you think otherwise, download SI's free eBook white-paper on Spend Visibility: An Implementation Guide, dive into your spend, and see just how much of it is indirect.)
Today we're going to continue our review of Part One -- The Process, and dive into the last three parts of Bill and Joe's excellent adventure into the strategic sourcing process and discuss:
A Balanced Scorecard is a strategic performance management tool that tracks supplier performance against a set of metrics in order to provide a well-rounded picture of the supplier that can be used to monitor and control performance. While most organizations introduce balanced scorecards after a supplier has been selected, scorecards should also be used when determining which suppliers to invite to the table, and everything -- pricing, capabilities, past performance, market intelligence, supplier responsiveness, and employee perception -- should be built into the scorecard to help insure the most appropriate supplier is selected.
The chapter also makes some great points that are often overlooked:
Eventually, every process results in negotiations, which are covered extensively in Chapter 6. The authors also make some great points in this chapter that cannot be forgotten:
The chapter also had some great techniques a buying team can use to improve pricing, as well as some very important things that a sourcing team should never do, which include:
and if it's not clear why, then you should definitely read this chapter.
The last, and final part, of the basic process is contracting -- getting it in writing. A contract should balance the need for legal protection with common sense. It should be concise and only address the relevant risks and identified resolutions. It should not be a generic -- one size fits all -- boilerplate MSA that is 100 pages in length where only 10 pages are really relevant. All that does is add time (for unnecessary review), cost (of the overpriced lawyers), and loss (while savings opportunities go unclaimed) to the process. With the exception of a few basic definitions, the only clauses that should be there besides negotiated terms and resolutions are a balanced force majeure clause, a right to audit clause, and, possibly, a right to first refusal clause. While the supplier should have the right to be late without penalty if an act of nature prevents it from business as usual, the buyer should have the right to seek alternate sources of supplier or terminate the contract if the supplier cannot recover in a certain amount of time and, especially in the case of software (maintenance) contracts, should NOT be required to make payments when the supplier is unable to perform. The right to audit should be for the life of the contract, the audit should be allowed to go all the way back to the start of the contract (even if four and a half years into a five year contract), and the buyer should have the right to recover all monies owed from overcharges, even if they were made four years ago.
The chapter also did a great job of explaining why:
There's some great advice in these pages -- and more to come in Part I.3 which will discuss how to truly achieve continuous innovation, how to get stakeholder buy-in, and what not to do if the goal is success. Continue to stay tuned!
If you have a significant global logistics operation, chances are that, by now, you have sophisticated tracking capabilities and can tell at any given time at least where your cargo was at one point during the last 24 hours. And this is good. But if you want to go beyond minimum import/export requirements that have emerged, and are continuing to emerge, in the US and EU, then you need more than continuous tracking and monitoring -- you need chain of custody.
Chances are that, right now, you're thinking this is nuts because "chain of custody", thanks to CSI-like forensic cop dramas, is associated in your mind as a "police" or "forensics" requirement when a crime is being investigated and has nothing to do with your supply chain, but it's a wrong association. And when one remembers that many of these laws were put in place to prevent terrorism and illegal goods (such as drugs), which regulators are expecting to occur in, or through, import/export operations, it starts to make sense. And it makes even more sense when one realizes that it's (becoming) a requirement for C-TPAT, which is crucial for efficient import/export operations given the slowdowns that have resulted by all of the additional paperwork and inspections that have been added to the import/export process over the last decade.
So what is a chain of custody? It is a process that asserts:
This, in turn requires that the cargo is secured from the time it is packed, verified, and sealed at origin, as confirmed by an authorized agent, until the time it arrives at its final destination and is verified to have been secured the entire way. In addition, all information relating to the cargo, its container, its movement, the person(s) verifying and sealing the cargo, and the persons transporting it must be maintained securely in the container security control system.
This may require more work, and more certifications, but there are benefits to the shipper, consignee, carrier, and CBP, as discussed in this great article on Tracking and Chain of Custody: The Difference over on Maritime Executive Magazine. Select Benefits include the following
Yesterday saw the release of SI's new sponsored white-paper on the Top 10 Technologies for Supply Management Savings Today. Sponsored by BravoSolution, this new whitepaper introduces the top 10 technologies that can help a company realize the goldmine of untapped savings opportunities it is sitting on. Properly employed, these technologies could help an organization tap cost reduction and savings opportunities that could collectively add up to 30%, or more, of spend across major direct and indirect categories.
e-Auction technology, which stands for electronic reverse auction technology, is typically the second entry point for a company moving from a paper-based sourcing process to a modern technology-enabled supply management solution and an organization's second stop to supply management savings.
The savings from e-Auction technology are essentially the same direct savings, from goods and services cost reductions, and indirect savings, from process efficiency and value generated from supply base expansion, found in RFX technology, with the major difference being the speed at which the event can be conducted.
With electronic auctions, once the sourcing manager creates the specifications and sets up the auction, including the weighting and award rules, the process drives itself. The suppliers sign on at the appropriate time and place their bids. When a time-limit or bid floor is reached, the auction ends and the award is made.
The major advantages of e-Auctions are the ability to define precise lot requirements and acceptable bid ranges, which can ensure cost reductions meet a minimal threshold; the ability to define different auction types, which can drive more competitive behaviour in the supply base if properly selected; and the extreme efficiency that can allow a large number of non-strategic or low-value categories to be brought under management.
Properly applied on the right categories at the right time, e-Auctions have been generating savings for over a decade. Back in 2003, in one of the first significant studies on e-Auctions, CAPS Research found that direct cost reductions usually averaged between 10% and 20%, that cycle time reductions could be as much as 40%, and that there could be a "power shift" from strong suppliers to weaker buyers not previously attainable. One company realized 165 Million of savings on 912 Million of spend, a major service provider estimated average savings of 20% on 30 Billion of reverse auctions, and a recent report from the IBM Centre is estimating that the Federal Government could save 8.9 Billion annually through reverse auctions alone.
And this technology is only #9 on the list of the Top 10 Technologies for Supply Management Savings Today. Imagine what could be saved with the top technology, or even the third best technology. Or better yet, instead of imagining, download Top 10 Technologies for Supply Management Savings Today and find out! (Registration is required for this one but the doctor believes it's worth it!)