Monthly Archives: July 2016

Procurement is Complex. Is Your Platform Capable of Handling It?

There’s been a lot of analysis of Brexit — Britain’s decision to leave the EU — an analysis that SI has pretty much stayed out of. There’s a lot to be said about the issue, pro and con, and a lot of fallout that will occur in the times to come. But when you get right down to it, this is just another example of the dynamic, ever-changing nature, of supply chains — which cannot be predicted.

Supply chains are full of risks. There are risks that can be easily predicted, such as raw material shortages, strikes, fleet breakdowns, and so on. There are risks that can not be easily predicted — such as embargoes on regime changes, riots, and massive shifts in trade and politics almost overnight (such as what happens when a country votes to leave a political union that manages trade).

All of a sudden, your costs are changing. Some of your supply lanes are changing (as some lanes will no longer be feasible or viable for your carriers). And some of your partners are going away (as they decide that they don’t want to do business with you anymore or you decide they are too expensive). And you do not know how these costs are going to change, which lanes will suddenly be unavailable (or what new options will materialize), and which partners are the most likely to leave, or what the new supply chain will look like.

With so much changing, how do you figure out what your new costs are? Which carriers, and lanes, are viable? Which partners you still want to do business with, and which partners will still want to do business with you when all things are considered?

In order to figure this out, you need big damn cost models. Complex, formula-driven, calculations. Breakdowns that include all components, energy costs, labour costs, other overhead costs, logistics costs, storage costs, and other costs. Modifications for expected changes based on recent and projected trends. What if analysis based upon potential cost concessions for volume or cost increases for lack thereof. And so on.

And, as you should be well aware by now, advanced cost modelling, bill of materials, and value-optimization is not a capability found in the majority of Procurement platforms. Is it in yours? If it’s not, there will come a point, possibly very soon, where your platform fails to serve you. This is not something you can afford.

As the doctor has said many times, a modern procurement platform can be your salvation, but it has to be the right one. Or at least the right one for the task. The reality is, you might need two. If your organization has a lot of high-dollar indirect with complex transportation requirements but also has a lot of simple indirect and MRO, or has a lot of complex direct with a lot of simple or non-strategic tail spend, you might need an optimization-backed sourcing platform with a simple e-Negotiation suite for the junior buyers or a sophisticated direct sourcing platform with a tail-spend platform for the day to day Procurement professionals.

Before you get blindsided by an occurrence that has the potential to totally decimate your supply main models and destroy your cost baselines, make sure you have the right platforms in place to adapt and get the best value no matter what. Start now while your not-so-bright peers are taking this strange thing called “vacation”. You won’t be sorry.

5 Reasons Why You Need to Take the Direct Procurement Challenge!

Hopefully you attended last week’s webinar on the Direct Procurement Challenge, hosted by the ISM and featuring the doctor and the prophet, where we explained how a sourcing platform cost-centric perfect for indirect doesn’t meet the needs of direct sourcing. But in case you missed it, here are some key requirements not met by typical indirect procurement platforms.

Requirement Indirect Platform Direct Platform
Bill of Materials NO BoM Support Deep multi-level Bill of Materials Support
Cost Breakdown Analysis Limited to ancilliary costs (shipping, taxes, storage, etc.) Deep cost breakdown support across the bill of materials which allows costs to be broken down and spread out across components, the production process, distribution and inventory management, and overhead
EDI, WebEDI, & XML XML data exchange only (maybe) XML, EDI, and WebEDI and direct integration into supplier systems
Quality Management RMA & account credit request (maybe) APQP, sample test reports, standard 8D & QDX complaints report;
goods issue documents
PLM (Product Lifecycle Management) No PLM Support Integrated project management and product lifecycle management
from cost breakdown analysis and BoM definition in the
sourcing phase to production and inventory management in the
supply chain phase to quality management and return management
in the support phase

And in Sourcing Innovation’s latest paper on The Direct Material Procurement Challenge: An Indirect Tool for Direct Procurement is Mission Improbable – Direct Procurement Requires Different Capabilities, the doctor discusses 10 (ten) additional reasons why an average indirect platform cannot solve direct Procurement needs. Check it out!

One Hundred and Thirty Years Ago …

Karl Benz first unveiled the Benz Patent-Motorwagen, German patent number 37435, widely regarded as the world’s first automobile as it was designed to be propelled by an internal combustion engine.

The Benz Patent-Motorwagen was a three-wheeled automobile with a rear-mounted engine that was constructed of steel tubing with woodwork panels, steel-spoked wheels, and solid rubber tires.

It was pretty primitive by today’s standards, but it was an important advancement as we wouldn’t have the delivery modes we have today without this historic invention.

LOLCats loved it … the swing just didn’t fulfill their need for speed.

The Tower of Spend (Repost)

This post originally ran nine years ago. But for many, the situation hasn’t changed. So we will lament their plight until they are granted the budget and platforms to enter the modern age.

Well my wits are gone and my hair is grey
I spend in categories where I used to save
And I’m crazy for help, but I’m here getting none
I’m just shuffling papers every day
Oh in the tower of spend

I said to Ignacio Lopez: how bad does it get
Ignacio Lopez hasn’t answered yet
But I hear him pacing all night long
A hundred floors above me
In the tower of spend

I was made for this, I could not sway
I felt that purchasing would show me the way
Out of corporate drudgery to the beyond
But they stuck me in the dungeon
In the tower of spend

So you can stick your little pins in that voodoo doll
Because it looks like I’m going to be nailed to the wall
There’s no light from the window when it should be strong
A total lack of visibility
In the tower of spend

Now you can say that I’ve grown bitter, but of this you can be sure
If I can not track my spend I’m going to end up poor
There’s a mighty judgement coming, and I sure hope I’m wrong
You see, I’m drowning in paperwork
In the tower of spend

I see you standing on the other side
I don’t know how the chasm got so wide
We were the same, way back when
And all the bridges are burning that I might have crossed
Still I feel so close to everything that I lost
Don’t want to lose it again

Now I bid you farewell, I don’t know when I’ll be back
They’re moving me tomorrow even further down the track
You won’t be hearing from me again, after I am gone
I’ll be drowning in the darkness
From a dungeon in the tower of spend

Yeah my wits are gone and my hair is grey
I spend in categories where I used to save
And I’m crazy for help, but I’m here getting none
I’m just shuffling papers every day
Oh in the tower of spend