Back in March / April, SI did a detailed review of Charles Dominick and Soheila Lunney‘s recent book, The Procurement Game Plan. This review was in-depth and spanned eight posts, which are indexed at the end of this post.
Astute readers will note that the doctor never finished the review. There were a couple of reasons for this, but one of the reasons was that he felt that something was missing from the final chapter of the book, on how to become a perennial Procurement all-star. It was good, but becoming an all-star is harder than you think, and if you’re only going to write a chaper on the subject, you better hit the nail on the head – fast. The chapter didn’t entirely do it for me.
Turns out, they were saving some of their best material on that point for the interviews. A few weeks (or so) ago they did a Q&A with Buyers Meeting Point that I bookmarked but didn’t bother to read closely until today. Answering a seemingly unrelated question on what place that traditional associations have in today’s social media environment, Soheila gave the best piece of advice a seasoned veteran can give a new entrant to the Procurement Game, especially if such entrant wants to be a Procurement All-Star. Soheila said you tend to get as much out of these opportunities as you put in – either a little or a lot. If you want to be a Procurement All-Star, you have to give it your all. Just memorizing the tips and techniques isn’t enough, you have to put your heart and soul into them. You can’t just go through the motions, you have to make them part of you. They have to be natural and instinctual because the Procurement Game is, in reality, as unpredictable as you can get. You could have an IT problem. You could have a market fluctuation that totally changes the supply-demand balance or projected exchange rates halfway through a negotiation. Your shipment of fig paste could be mistaken for hash by an untrained, inept cargo inspector and destroyed. (It has happened.) Every day presents a multitude of opportunities for your game plan to be turned inside out, upside down, and outside in (simultaneously) and you have to be able to react and take a reasonable course of action in real time. You might not even have time to wait for your boss to return from lunch. But if you’ve put all you got into it, you’ll have all you need to get it all back, and then some.
Anyway, check out the Q&A with Buyers Meeting Point. It offers some great insights into the book. (And Charles’ recommendation for Managing Indirect Spend by Joe Payne and William Dorn of Source One, also reviewed in depth on SI earlier this year, is dead on.) (Soheila’s recommendation for Charles Poirier‘s The Supply Chain Manager’s Problem Solver is a good one too. Although the nature of technology and the internet have changed in the last decade, most organizations are still making many of the 12 mistakes covered in the book.)
To be concluded???
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 1.1
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 1.2
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 2.1
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 2.2
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 2.3
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 3.1
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 3.2
Procurement Game Plan: A Review Part 3.3