Monthly Archives: September 2006

The Sourcing Innovation Series: Part XI

Today I’d like to welcome guest contributor John Martin of Building SaaS to Sourcing Innovation with a guest post on The Future of Sourcing … for Services. If you followed the On-Demand series, you might remember that I discussed his article How True Software-as-a-service Delivers More Value extensively in the fourth installment of my On Demand series.

Our focus is on purchased services: consulting services, contingent labor, outsourcing services, field services, legal services, etc. What we’ve found, in providing our Services Procurement solution to dozens of Fortune 500 companies, is that companies gain the best results by managing the entire end-to-end lifecycle of purchased services.

The primary characteristic of service categories is that they are all different. However, I’ll mention a few commonalities about managing purchased services, then suggest a few ways we’re seeing our leading-edge customers manage and optimize services spending.

First, here are some generalized characteristics about purchased services:

Services spending is growing: With the increases in business process outsourcing and focus on core competencies, services spending is increasing twice as fast as that on indirect goods spending, according to CAPS Research. Economically, the prices of services are also inherently inflationary since they are closely tied to labor costs, which increase over time faster than goods costs, on average – the Federal Bank of New York’s analysis shows that services’ inflation rate has stayed consistently 2.6% over that of goods over the last three decades.

Core PCE Goods and Core PCE Services Inflation 1968:1-2002:4

Services spending is often difficult to manage centrally: For some services categories such as marketing services and legal services, functional executives “own” the supplier relationships and spending. For others such as contingent workers and facilities management services, the sourcing and purchasing activities are dispersed throughout the enterprise.

There can be many unknowns at sourcing time: Some services such as contingent workers and print services have unique requisitions every time, so up-front pricing is difficult to establish. In other cases, the needs of the enterprise change more quickly than anticipated at sourcing time, which has led many multi-year outsourcing engagements to fail.

Services spending involves a lot of uniqueness: every contract is unique with terms in the statement of work text, requisitions are often unique, services deliverables are different for every contract, and the quality and acceptance measures differ by category, contract, and deliverable.

“Value delivered” is often a key concept for purchased services: When a services provider touches your customers directly (such as call-center outsourcing or field installation services) or can positively impact your business results (IT application development services, marketing services), the potential value of those services becomes a multi-dimensional concept (including multiple flavors of “quality”) to continuously measure and improve.

Finally, services involve many additional risks: When a supplier’s workers come onsite to deliver the services, now there are risks to manage regarding security, safety, confidentiality, etc. For contingent workers, there are HR-related risks such as co-employment and worker classification, as well as tracking the results of prior work performed by the worker.

As a result of these characteristics of purchased services, sourcing becomes an ongoing process rather than an event. For example, in some categories such as contingent workforce and print, the sourcing event creates the marketplace of preferred suppliers, and each requisition is sent out to the suppliers for bid – sourcing at procurement time. For almost all services categories, the delivery phase produces information that allows better sourcing and contract negotiating in the next sourcing phase.

After managing this iterative process for a few years, it’s almost impossible to continue to improve the cost basis of services through sourcing, at least since wage pricing started firming up a couple of years ago.

So we’re seeing companies turn to other ways to improve services sourcing, as hints to the future of sourcing. Extending Eric Strovink’s compliance comments and Tim Minahan’s “frontline sourcing” concept, here are some trends that we see improving services sourcing going forward:

Link sourcing with procure-to-pay and spend analysis: Some would say that for services, contract execution and compliance are everything. The cost savings and value from contracted deliverables are on paper after sourcing, but are actually captured only through a tightly coupled procure-to-pay program. Then, spend analysis on the detailed requisition, deliverable and invoice activities allows improved re-sourcing the next time, in a cyclical sourcing-improvement process.

Actively use learning strategies throughout the cycle to improve sourcing: Since services have many unknowns at sourcing time, and much of the services value is determined during the delivery phase, companies are engineering their supplier relationships and processes to maximize learning. For example, multi-sourcing sets up a competition among service providers, and spending can be directed to the better-performing suppliers. Companies are starting to track every touch-point with a supplier, gathering qualitative information through surveys to gain much more insight into value and transaction costs. Service-level metrics are becoming much more detailed and continuously monitored (with direct data feeds from the services supplier) to gain insight into the supplier’s processes and capabilities that underlie their delivered quality and value.

Manage and shape demand: The demand drivers for many services are fragmented and hard to pin down – definitely not available in a production forecast. Since service prices tend to rise over time, it pays to focus on controlling costs through internal demand management, rather than just increasing pressure on suppliers each year. Demand for services is also malleable, as which tasks performed internally versus by the supplier can be changed if needed. Investigating internal demand drivers and supplier interaction processes can lead to ways to reduce time and costs by shifting activities to/from the supplier, redrawing the process boundaries, and eliminating non-value-add tasks performed by either party.

Build tighter linkages into suppliers’ systems: In the direct goods world, linking into the suppliers’ inventory, logistics, and production systems is a now-common practice. In services, however, this is much less prevalent. In addition to pulling service-level metrics from the supplier (such as call and incident tracking information for call-center outsourcers), companies are adding system integrations for requisitions, deliverables, and invoices to greatly reduce transaction costs and eliminate the “echo-chamber” interaction costs of haggling over invoices post-delivery. Going forward, there is emerging interest in linking into suppliers’ availability, skill capability, and project tracking systems to better optimize delivery processes, and a desire for better collaboration tools throughout the lifecycle of interactions with the supplier.

Invest more in supplier discovery and development: Most large companies have too many services supplier relationships, so supplier consolidation is the first effort. However, in order to keep up with the state-of-the-art in purchased services, we see a need to provide better tools for finding and starting up relationships with high-quality emerging services suppliers. Along the same lines, companies will need to more proactively develop niche and high-performing services suppliers in the upcoming years.

Thanks again to John Martin for this insightful post on The Future of Sourcing … Services.

eyefortransport’s 2nd Supply Chain Directions Summit

As I mentioned in my post Supply Chain Direction: Collaboration is Key back in July, eyefortransport’s 2nd Supply Chain Directions Summit is coming up in November. This year it is being held at the Sofitel San Francisco Bay, Redwood, Hotel on November 28-29th in San Francisco, California. (Download the brochure.)

Billed as the only event that gives you proven strategies to achieve a demand driven seamless supply chain through Collaboration, Forecasting, Inventory & Disruption Management, Data Integration, Top Sourcing & Outsourcing, as I stated in my previous post, what caught my attention was the speaker list which reads like a who’s who list in the logistics and SCM trenches. In addition, attendees are going to be treated to case studies from Nokia on best practices in handling global transportation security, Coca Cola on delivery and inventory level optimization, Michelin on RFID implementation, intel on 3PL costs, Nike on 3PL lessons learned, the Gap on turning security requirements to your advantage, and M-I SWACO on multi-tiered supply chain management as well as panel sessions on the creation of a proactive demand-driven value-creating supply chain, global sourcing options, outsourcing logistics strategies, and supply chain immunization.

If you’ve kept up with SourcingInnovation and eSourcing Forum over the summer, you’ll notice that these are all topics I’ve spent a considerable amount of time on (especially in my weekend series) and all vital to your continued supply chain success. I know there are a lot of supply chain (related) events being held annually (as I maintain a large list over on the Sourcing Innovation Web Site, but given the speaker line up and the topics being focused on, I don’t see how you could afford to ignore this one, especially since, to the best of my knowledge, it does not conflict with any other significant supply chain event. (Feel free to email me at thedoctor<at>sourcinginnovation<dot>com to have your event added to the list!) Check it out, and feel free to contact the Events Director, Rodrigo Canete if you have any questions about the 2nd Supply Chain Directions Summit.

The Sourcing Innovation Series: Part X

I know it’s been a few days, but as I said in my last post, it wasn’t over … just delayed a little while my fellow bloggers enjoyed the long weekend and collected their thoughts. Over the last couple of days, Charles Dominick posted Sourcing Innovation for Enterprise-Wide Contracts, his second post on the future of sourcing, and Jason Busch posted Evaluating Spend Visibility and Analytics Providers. Now, I know Jason’s post wasn’t explicitly a post on the future of sourcing, but it is on spend management innovation, and the future of sourcing is all about innovation.

Charles pointed out that the sourcing world is ready to go to another level. In the not too-distant future, we’re going to look back at today’s supplier selection methodology and consider it archaic. Today we use TCO analyses or weighted average supplier scorecards, but these are problematic in that each internal customer or commodity team will not only value different criteria variably but assign different subjective values to the same qualitative criteria.

In the future, Charles expects speculative bickering to be replaced by the widespread watching of simulations of various scenarios associated with the various supplier selection opportunities. The sourcing team will see the risks and the impact on the buying organization if those risks come to fruition. I think Charles in on to something here. While I do not foresee simulation replacing decision optimization for award allocations, for reasons that I will discuss in an upcoming red paper from Iasta that I am co-authoring, it is a great technology for risk evaluation, identification, and mitigation as you can not only simulate the effect of a disruption but the effect of a risk mitigation strategy. This gives you a more comprehensive, tangible understanding of the factors that should influence your decision.

The net effect is that in the future a procurement professional will need to be even more skilled and educated then today as you will have to be smarter than the simulator, and understand what factors the simulation considers and know how to evaluate those factors to arrive at an optimal decision. According to Charles, some of the skills a purchaser will require in addition to their current skill set are:

  • Skills in quantitative analysis, with an understanding of statistical probabilities, decision trees, etc.
  • Knowledge of macro- and micro-economics
  • The analytical ability to quantify the total cost of the supplier relationship, not just the total cost of ownership

In addition, a procurement professional will need a better understanding of decision optimization, the underlying technologies, and where simulation ends and optimization begins. Not an easy task, but this is why procurement is going to become the center of tomorrow’s organization.

Jason focused on spend visibility, noted that your spend management approaches need to become more sophisticated, indicated that your solution providers need to focus on content integration, vision, and integration, and that in a few years time leading procurement organizations will think about spend visibility, supplier performance, and supplier risk management as a single implementation.

With respect to content integration, Jason states that auto-classification and cleansing tools will never be sufficient on their own, since examining the supplier master is just a start. You also need to be concerned with supplier credentialing, supplier financial viability, supplier quality, and operationally related information.

With respect to vision, your solution provider needs to have value beyond just one-time cost reduction category sourcing efforts, otherwise you should be looking at another solution provider because the true value of any spend or supply management solution is long term viability. At the very least, your provider should understand and offer solutions for long term supplier performance management and supply risk management.

The solution should be integrated into, or support strong integration with, a spend management suite and have strong ties into other systems of record and data stores since the notion of periodic batch-based approaches to spend visibility and analytics is no longer sufficient and the future will require near real-time updates to insure your supply chain continually functions like a well-oiled machine.

All-in-all, a great couple of days on sourcing innovation and the future of sourcing.

Why it’s just easier to do your job

It’s my day off (from sourcing), and this week I’m going to attack all those stupid How To Do Nothing at Work and Get Away With it lists. The latest one that was brought to my attention was one at Full Duplex . Org

Their top 10 list goes as follows:

  1. Look Busy
  2. Look Stressed
  3. Speak Quickly
  4. Hide
  5. Break a Limb
  6. Make Excuses
  7. Never Leave Your Office/Room
  8. What they can’t see
  9. Fool their eyes
  10. Choose a profession people don’t understand

As far as I’m concerned, this is more work than just doing my job. After all, the only way you can truly get away with not working for any reasonable amount of time is to convince people you actually are working around the clock. This requires keeping up appearances, and most of the above suggestions require an awful lot of work. Let’s examine them one by one.

  1. Look Busy
    This requires always having potentially relevant materials in hand, a lot of flustery movement, and good acting. You’ll have to spend time collecting relevant materials, keeping in shape, and taking acting classes.
  2. Look Stressed
    Either you take acting classes, or you get stressed out trying to look stressed all the time – the first is work, and the second requires a good workout to get out.
  3. Speak Quickly
    Auctioneer classes.
  4. Hide
    Lots of time exploring the work area and observing your coworkers habits to determine where you can hide and when the best time to hide there is.
  5. Break a Limb
    Either you put yourself through pain and agony, or get a fake cast and put yourself through pain and agony. Work however you look at it.
  6. Make Excuses
    You’ll have to track which excuses you use when, as you only have so many relatives who can get sick/die so many times, and after a while, you’ll have to do some serious research to come up with new, plausible excuses.
  7. Never Leave Your Office/Room
    Well, I lied – this one isn’t work, unless you count the therapy you are going to have to undergo to combat the anti-social phobias you’re going to develop as a result of this one.
  8. What they can’t see
    Well, I guess this isn’t too much work after you rearrange your office, but you’re going to have to practice those very concerned looks to make sure people hurriedly walk away and don’t try to sneak a peak. But then you’ll be shunned, become an anti-social recluse, never leave your office/room, and we are back to our previous problem.
  9. Fool their eyes
    Now you have to setup quick-switch programs and shortcuts to switch to real work in a flash and either constantly listen / watch for visitors or install monitoring software and hardware to let you know when someone is close. Plus, you’re going to have to work on your multi-tasking skills to remember where you switch from and what you switched to.
  10. Choose a profession people don’t understand
    Problem here is that you have to understand it, or you’ll get found out – and if very few people understand it, it’s probably very hard and a lot of work, which is what you were trying to avoid in the first place.

Well, I hope I’ve convinced you that these lists are a waste of time and that it’s probably just easier to do your job and, more importantly, given you the confidence to tell the next person who sends you one of these lists to stop wasting time and do their damn job!

Have a great weekend!

Ailse Warfare in China?

Another very interesting article in the Economist last month was an article on retailing in China entitled Ready for warfare in the aisles that indicated that not only is China a market of unprecedented opportunity for both domestic and foreign retailers, but it is also a battleground where only the strong will surive.

At the same time that China is trying to become an innovation-based knowledge economy, it is also transitioning to a westernized mass-production and mass-consumption society. According to the article, China’s retail sales are set to expand by 13% to the equivalent of $860 billion this year, making the mainland the world’s seventh-largest retail market. Furthermore, there are now over 1,000 foreign retailers in China compared with just 314 two years ago. This is a stark contrast to traditional retailing in China where the majority of stores are tiny, family run outfits. Even today, China’s top 100 chains account for just a tenth of total retail sales. But it appears that local and foreign investors are eager to change all of that.

However, it appears the local competition is not taking it very well. The article points out that Crippling price discounts can be accompanied by dirty tactics: some stores send fake “customers” to rivals’ new stores to snap up all the promotions before genuine customers can get them. Another trick is to jam the doors of the lockers used by shoppers to store their purchases.

Nonetheless, given that suppliers can pay heavily to place their goods on retailers’ shelves, lease space for in-store displays, help pay for promotions, and give rebates, international chains are still eager to enter the market as these conditions can allow them to be profitable in their first year.

So what does this mean for your supply chain? I’d conjecture that it means two things. One: as the China retail market expands, you might find that you’ll be low cost country sourcing in other parts of Asia for your growing China market while volume-based low-cost country sourcing in China for your North American market and Two: when securing partnerships with local retailers, be sure to factor in all of the incidental costs and fees that will be required to successfully promote your products. Beyond that, I’d say it’s hard to tell … the huge influx of foreign retailers is going to drastically change the market, but I’m betting even the economists are having trouble predicting precisely how, and when, everything is going to happen. But it is going to impact your China supply chain, and is worth keeping tabs on.