Monthly Archives: May 2007

Spend Analysis: What Purchasing.com Got Wrong

Purchasing’s recent article on  “How to Select a Sourcing Strategy” wasn’t the only article that just didn’t make the cut in my book. “Their ABCs of Spend Analysis”  article missed the point as well. However, knowing that Eric Strovink of BIQ (acquired by Opera Solutions, rebranded ElectrifAI) would also be taken aback by this article, I invited him to shed some light on what the article missed. So, without further ado, here’s Eric’s guest post on What Purchasing.com Got Wrong.

Occasionally an article crosses my desk that seems well-written and insightful, such as
Purchasing.com’s “The ABCs of Spend Analysis” — but only if I’m willing to accept
assumptions with which I can’t agree.

“A: Acquire the data skills”

Wait, stop right there. In my view, it shouldn’t be necessary to
“acquire data skills” in order to manipulate and report on spend data.
This limits usage to a fraction of the business users who otherwise could
deeply improve their understanding of what’s going on. Any requirement to
dump data out of a spend analysis system and import it into Microsoft
Access or any other database management system is a glaring indictment
of the spend analysis system itself. It’s supposed to be a “spend analysis”
for goodness sake, so where’s the “analysis?” Similarly, a requirement
for SQL skills or other IT expertise in order to construct a report
is equally an indictment of the spend analysis system.

We should not allow tool limitations to dictate that business users
must become IT experts in order to analyze their data. That’s like saying
drivers must become mechanics before they can use the interstate highway system.

“B: Bring the data together”

One could hope that “ETL (Extract, Transform, Load)” would not be
the theme of this page, but of course it is. In fact, the only letter
that’s relevant in this tired acronym is “T” (for “Transform”). If
you can’t load data into your spend analysis system, then find one
that makes it easy. If you can’t dump data out of your ERP or accounting
system(s) in some reasonable flat file format (like .csv), you didn’t
try very hard. Every accounting system I’ve dealt with in the last
four years, old or new, has a perfectly reasonable and simple method
for dumping its data, almost always a method that requires no IT
assistance at all.

Transformation is necessary in order to coerce data from incompatible
systems into a common format. A good transformation tool should be able
to move any field from one column to any other; create new fields;
eliminate fields; and create any output field as a function (including
string, math, and logical functions like “IF”) of any number of
input fields. It should be able to save the transform and apply it
on refresh.

And the translation tool should be — you guessed it — operable by
ordinary business users, not just by IT types.

“C: Change the way you source”

Wait, should we just plow ahead and start sourcing? It turns
out that accounts payable-level spend analysis doesn’t really
show you very much, and this section of the article reinforces
the point. “We realized we were spending more with Supplier K
than we had previously thought, and this gave us more leverage
in negotiations.” OK, but do you know whether contract terms
were met? Was the supplier over-charging? What were the exact
buy points and quantities with supplier Q for commodity X? Why
didn’t a contract with supplier Y result in the savings we projected?

Problem is, an A/P level cube only peels back the first layer
of the onion. You’ve achieved a reasonable idea of what was bought,
who bought it, and who supplied it, and that’s important. However,
spend analysis is an iterative process of first identifying macro
behaviors, and then zooming in using micro analysis on a
commodity-specific basis. The high level cube gives you an
indication of what might be wrong — too many suppliers, or
too few; too high a spend rate given [number of employees] or
[size of business]; too much off-contract spend. But that’s
all it gives you. You don’t really know, for example, whether
off-contract spend (Fred down in Order Entry buying a Dimension
800 from Dell) is an inferior price point to the company’s VAR
contract for ThinkPads — or whether Fred actually got a better deal.

If the high-level cube hints at a possibility for cost reduction,
should you run right out and start running sourcing events? Maybe
not. For one thing, it’s sometimes difficult to determine
whether high spend is a demand issue or a supply issue, and
sourcing won’t touch the demand side. Sourcing events are
politically disruptive, can take many months to implement,
and can upset long-term supplier relationships unnecessarily.
It’s entirely possible that quietly confronting an incumbent
supplier with a detailed analysis of buy patterns from
invoice-level data can not only change behavior immediately,
but also return money to the bottom line from overcharges. And,
it certainly will tell you if you have a demand problem. If,
at the end of the day, sourcing is still required, fine; but in
many cases it’s not. Few incumbent vendors want to go through
a sourcing exercise and potentially lose the business; they’d
rather meet Fred’s price point.

Thanks Eric! I could not have said it better myself.

Forsooth the (e-Sourcing) Wiki

Don’t forsake the Wiki just because it’s new. It might not contain entries on everything you want to read about yet, but that’s the beauty of the Wiki, you can help create those entries. And it is growing in content almost weekly now.

So far, the e-Sourcing Wiki [WayBackMachine] has entries on:

  • Strategic e-Sourcing Best Practices
    On-Demand / SaaS Application Platforms
    Strategic Sourcing Success Factors
    Spend Analysis and Opportunity Assessment
    Next Generation Sourcing
    Cost Reduction and Avoidance
    Center Led Purchasing
    Supplier Performance Management
    Demand Driven Supply
    Six Sigma

With entries on the following topics (and more) still to come:

  • e-RFx & Supplier Management
  • Next Generation e-Auctions
  • Sourcing Decision Optimization
  • Contract Management and Compliance
  • Sourcing Process Automation
  • Low Cost Country Sourcing
  • Procurement Outsourcing
  • An e-Procurement Primer
  • Supplier Risk Management
  • Sourcing Process Automation

And I’m sure more will come when it starts to catch on. So be sure to check it out again, and to keep doing so regularly.

PLM for Trends Base Industries

Although not a common subject on my blog, I am a big believer in Product Life-cycle Management, PLM, solutions as they can greatly simplify the development, management, sale, maintenance, and phase-out of a product in a large organization. To this end, PTC has released a short white paper entitled “PLM: An Imperative for Keeping Pace with a Trend-Based Industry” that presents some good arguments for such systems that I am going to repeat here, despite the fact it was obviously written to sell PTC’s solution(s) to apparel and related industries.

A good PLM system will provide:

  • complete process visibility compared to the limited process visibility that is the norm without a solution
  • a centralized, usually web-based, point of control compared to a lack of control point without a solution
  • one version of the product status and truth
  • workflow management
  • unparalleled control over the product life-cycle
  • an integration point for the various systems used in the various stages of product design, development, and merchandising

Another interesting point made by the article is that research, including research by KSA, points to reductions in development cycle time by as much as 20% to 50% when PLM technology is employed. In fast moving industries, such as apparel and electronics, where delay equals value, and subsequently revenue, reduction, this benefit of PLM alone should make the identification and adoption of an appropriate solution a priority.

Furthermore, PLM solutions allow sourcing and procurement managers to be involved in the development process from day one. They can analyze suggested materials and processes, determine whether or not they are cost effective, and suggest alternate materials and processes that are likely to produce the same quality at a low cost and, thus, a higher value point to the organization. Considering that up to 80% of a product’s cost can be locked in during the design phase, this benefit alone can often cover the cost of implementing an appropriate PLM system.

Purchasing’s Advice on Selecting a Sourcing Strategy

The second installment in Purchasing’s Strategic Sourcing series offered five more tips to buyers wanting to improve their sourcing programs. The tips they offered were:

  • Know the supplier’s cost
  • Rank the supplier’s importance
  • Seek long term relationships
  • Become a commodity specialist
  • Concentrate on the critical materials

These are all good tips, but it completely misses the main point. A strategy is a (long term) plan of action designed to achieve a particular goal, most often a “winning one”. These are all tactics, or actions taken to achieve a specific effect. They are not strategy.

A strategy results from the detailed analysis of your business, goals, product lines, and supply chain and the options available to you. What are you making, and what do you need to source to make the product? Can you source global, or do you have to source local? What are the processes that need to be respected? For each of the different options, what are the associated costs? Is the product complex, high value, or a combination thereof, or is it simple, low value, or simple and low value?

Based on the answers to these questions, you determine the geographic, negotiation, and category specific elements of your sourcing strategy. The circuit boards are complex and high value, so I have to source from a select group of manufacturers that meet these very demanding criteria. I need to replenish my product stores rapidly for my local restaurant chain, so I need to source from regional suppliers. I need to design a new control system, so I need to focus on suppliers that will work with me to reduce development and production time and cost.

Only when the strategy has been figured out do you start identifying potential suppliers, analyzing their cost structures compared to your should cost models, or ranking their importance with respect to your organizational goals. Furthermore, only once you have an overall supply chain strategy that allows you to separate out the “critical materials” can you concentrate on those materials and become a commodity specialist. So, even though these are all good tips, even combined, they do not constitute a strategy.

If you want a short article that gives you an idea on where to look for an appropriate strategy, I’d recommend J.P. Massin’s post “The Strategic Sourcing Matrix quadrants’ characteristics” over on Strategic Sourcing Europe [WayBackMachine] instead.

It’s … It’s … It’s … Coupa-sonic!

The press-release hits the wire later today, but ISM started yesterday, and thus your chance to see the new version of Coupa‘s Enterprise Procurement Platform is here! It’s not only Purchasing Simplified, it’s the next evolution of on-demand procurement for the small and mid-sized enterprise.

The enterprise version of Coupa not only supports the procurement cycle from end-user requisition through delivery confirmation, but also supports approval hierarchies, attachments and automatic PDF creation, punch-out support, asset tagging, multi-way matching, and even RFQs! (I know, I know … everybody and their dog supports RFQs these days, but how many people include this basic e-Sourcing functionality inside an e-Procurement system at no-extra cost? And how many are designed with the straightforward needs of a SME in mind? And how many are easy to use?)

Based on Coupa’s underlying open-source Coupa Express platform, the industry’s first freely downloadable eProcurement solution, a company can be up and running on Coupa almost immediately. According to Lynell Rogeri of Cantaxx, Coupa Enterprise was delivering results within 24 hours of installation and the simple, ‘clean’, screens allowed them to be much more productive than they could have been with traditional procurement software. Furthermore, Coupa offers the breadth of functionality that gives them exactly the business process support they need.

As per the press release:

Small and mid-size companies that want a simple and affordable solution to automate their purchasing, invoicing, and eRFQ processes can now choose Coupa eProcurement Enterprise. Delivered as On-Demand or On-Premise software, Coupa eProcurement Enterprise includes full product support and offers a total cost of ownership that is 10 to 20 percent of what companies pay for traditional eProcurement solutions.

So, if you’re in Vegas, be sure to check out their ISM booth! If you weren’t able to make it, attend their webinar and check out the new Coupa website!

And if you missed any, here are the previous posts on Coupa’s product:
More Than Coupacetic
Riding the Rails with Coupa
Coupa Charges Ahead
Coupa Cabana Cafe: Open For Business
Procurement Independence at the Coupa Cabana Cafe

As well as the Coupa production chant in
Davie and the Coupa Factory

After all, It’s Coupa Time!