Next Generation Analytics NEEDS to Surface Root Cause Analysis …

… but relationship modelling alone is NOT going to get us there!

In another great article by Xavier Olivera of Hackett Spend Matters, he dives into the topic of how procurement analytics needs to work – from visibility to orientation because current procurement analytics offerings, while reasonably good and actionable at the process level compared to where they were a few years ago, are poor at helping users orient themselves when a specific goal or problem comes into focus.

He notes that when a procurement leader decides they want to improve X, the challenge is no longer visibility. It is knowing which analytics matter for that objective and which do not. But all the analytics platforms give them today is metrics, they don’t give them direction. Even if the user knows what metric to drill into first (because it is the highest, lowest, or outlier), all they can see is the data that contributed to that metric. For spend, the transactions. For a supplier rating, the Net Promoter Scores. For a process, the time in each step.

The users see the immediate “what”, but not the “why”. Why were the transactions high? Is this market price, has the quantity gone up, or is the supplier charging above the agreed upon rate. For a rating, is it because the performance wasn’t up to spec, the delivery is consistently late, or the service/interactions are very poor. For a process, which time was too long (compared to average), unless you can dig into another level (and even then, why it was too long).

According to Xavier, in situations like these, analytics has to work different. When a procurement leader wants to improve contract compliance, the starting point should not be a full review of all compliance metrics, benchmarks and dashboards. It should be a guided path that surfaces the specific reports, KPIs and comparisons most likely to explain the gap, given the organization’s operating context.

Which is a great start, but just surfacing those reports, KPIs, and comparisons that are statistically relevant or deviations from a norm doesn’t explain the gap, it just captures the gap. Not only is it the case that a KPI only becomes meaningful once it is examined in the right context, but it only becomes useful if there is enough data to allow the system to determine, with high statistical likelihood, the root cause and actions to take that could address the root cause (and not just the symptom these systems surface today).

Xavier than tells us that the ability to orient analytics effectively depends on the data’s structure, which is partially right, but doesn’t quite capture the entire requirement. He goes onto state that Procurement outcomes do not arise from isolated transactions … they emerge over time from relationships and analytics is most effective when the underlying data model can express these relationships explicitly. Which is closer. But the reality is that this still isn’t enough for proper root cause analysis.

It’s critical, because without relationships you can’t trace the end metric back to the source data, but just being able to identify the source data only tells you what is fundamentally wrong, not why, or what you need to do about it.

That’s where analytics needs to get to.

If your steel category transactions are high, you can trace back to the contracts and whether or not the rates are per contract, the shipping is per carrier quote, the tonnage as expected, and the breakdown across steel categories appropriate for your current product lines or construction products. If any rates or tonnage don’t add up, you know the issue is the invoices — but you don’t know why they are being paid. Were the new rates not properly encoded? Were the tolerances within acceptable limits and the automatic OK-to-Pay issued despite the mismatch? Are category managers blindly overriding the system because the supplier was threatening late shipments if payments didn’t appear on time?

In Xavier’s example, if contract compliance is low, why? Is it just a few suppliers, or even a single supplier, across a category. If just a few suppliers, are they unaware of the contract because of personnel changeover? Did a new industry regulation adversely affect them? Was it actually the fault of a carrier or sub-tier supplier they had no control over? This is what you need to determine to ensure that compliance actually improves and stays improved.

In other words, you need more than the data, you need models that capture what the data element used in a KPI is, who or what creates the data in the first place (and how they create that data), what the data range and typical mean/median/mode values are, what positively or negatively impacts the data, and what can be done if a shift is desired in the data.

Without this baked in intelligence into the model, even if the root data in the system can be uncovered, a user won’t understand what it means or where to start doing something about it. That’s where analytics needs to get to for analysts to be proactive instead of reactive.

And this is another area where the Busch-Lamoureux approach to Exact Purchasing will help. When you define your categories at a granular level appropriate to to the quadrant of the pocket cube they occupy, you not only know what influences their cost, but what also influences their supply, what defines their quality, and what role third parties (that you may have to monitor) play. You have the foundations for doing real proactive analysis and identifying not only what “good” is but what is most likely contributing to a “not good” metric or data point and what standard options exist to address, and try to improve, the data point (as you need to mitigate high risk and manage high complex categories at a detailed level).

In other words, the future is knowledge-based models that capture more than data points and calculations, but what the data points actually mean and what factors (represented by other data points) directly influence the data points you are analyzing.

AI Doesn’t Drive Savings, Innovation, or Performance. Sourcing Excellence Does.

And Sourcing Excellence requires (Strategic Sourcing) Decision Optimization.

As the Sourcing Optimization Grand Master Paul Martyn has clearly stated in his post on how Procurement is at an Inflection Point:

  • AI won’t fix Procurement.
  • Dashboards won’t fix Procurement.
  • Better Data won’t even fix Procurement.

ONLY structured, modelled decision making that gets executed in the practice of true Sourcing Excellence will.

And that structured decision making will be based on true multi-objective sourcing optimization that takes costs, risks, and goals into account to help you, the intelligent human, make the right decision that a dumb machine will never see.

And if you want to find out how that’s done, reach out to the Sourcing Optimization Grand Master himself who has saved Billions in his career WITHOUT increasing risk, liability, or complexity and find out how your organization could be the next to save millions (upon millions) while making less risky and more valuable decisions.

Sourcing Excellence Is Predictability in Tough Times

Sourcing Mediocrity, or worse, Bad Buying, leads to chaos.

Your costs are up.

Your delivery predictability is gone.

Your energy supply is intermittent and brown outs are becoming normal while those costs go up too.

Your taps are running dry.

Your workforce benefit costs are going up as healthcare costs skyrocket.

Your AI costs are going up as compute and consulting skyrockets and more consultant time is needed to deal with the results of bad, bad, hallucinations, that have gone beyond wrong orders, 3-way mismatches, and fraudulent payments to bad customer advice and legal claims that have put you in legal jeopardy.

This isn’t inflation. This is bad buying.

With good buying and sourcing excellence:

Your costs are stable — because you didn’t select risky suppliers, squeeze their margins to dangerously low levels, or make ridiculous asks that only add cost and not value.

Your deliveries are predictable as you’ve selected carriers that can support multiple routes and have re-routing plans in place if a route gets shut down due to a port strike, border closing, or “Geopolitical conflict” (i.e. war).

Your energy supply is regular as you were sure to build where the grid could support your energy needs, select providers (where you had a choice) that could guarantee the supply, and installed backup generators for key functions (and batteries for minimal lights and on-site computing requirements).

Your water pressure is through the roof as you ensured there was adequate supply and put contracts in place to guarantee it.

You manage your benefit negotiations carefully, put long term contracts in place, and work with the provider to prevent fraud (which makes you a customer of choice).

You don’t buy Gen-AI just because every brain-fried consultant and their favourite cognitively atrophied analyst is telling you to. You buy classic AI that works hallucination and error free at a fraction of the compute and cost.

In other words, you apply sourcing excellence end-to-end.

And you make good use of (strategic sourcing) decision optimization.

And you realize savings twice the savings of your peers.

But don’t take my word for it. Take the word of Paul Martyn, one of the original Sourcing Optimization Grand Masters who has sourced over 20 Billion dollars, and seen consistent results doing so over the past two decades.

And saved oodles of cash. To find out how much, check out this post on how you’re seeing your sourcing decisions repriced from bad buying. Then do the math on how much you could be saving (and, of course, reach out to Paul if you’d like someone to help you put a plan in place to save that money).

P.S. If you haven’t figured it out yet, if you were using Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing you’d not only know that you should already be using optimization, but where, why, and would have already reached out to Paul to help you define the program.

Sourcing Excellence IS Optimization!

Sourcing Excellence requires optimization. Not AI. Optimization. We have finally reached a point where nothing else will get you there.

And Sourcing Excellence requires Paul Martyn. You need someone who has built and led programs, evaluated and employed multiple tools, and has the decades of experience to bring the insights you need instantly to the table. With many of the sourcing optimization greats (who founded CombineNet, VerticalNet Tigris, Trade Extensions, etc.) retired or moved on, the number of people left who have over two decades of practical experience are countable on your fingers (just like the number of analysts who have been consistently covering this space for two decades). Paul Martyn is one of the few, true, optimization masters left. So if you want to save your supply chain, reach out to Paul.

If you want to understand why, as well as why sourcing excellence truly requires optimization (as it’s time has finally come), since I know you won’t listen to me, read Paul’s ongoing Sourcing Excellence series, which just saw Part 11 published.

  1. Part 1: (Optimization is Thinking)
  2. Part 2: (Optimization Frames Reality)
  3. Part 3: (Optimization is More than a Capability)
  4. Part 4: (Optimization Changed the Game)
  5. Part 5: (Optimization Must Always Be On)
  6. Part 6: (AI is NOT Yet Fly in Procurement)
  7. Part 7: (Innovation is Just an Input)
  8. Part 8: (Orchestration is the Key)
  9. Part 9: (Value is a Game)
  10. Part 10: (Constraints Dictate)
  11. Part 11: (Constraints Vary)