In our last post, we reviewed a post by the Great Garry Mansell on the rule of two where he outlined when an organization needs to hire a COO in order to continue to grow. We noted that you can use the same same logic to determine when you should hire the CPO, which should happen earlier than most organizations believe.
In a follow up post on the hidden tax, Garry gave us another great reason to hire a CPO early.
Basically, as organizations grow, they spend money to feel professional. It’s a hidden tax that grows over time that not only (greatly) reduces their EBITDA and profit, but also decreases their resiliency.
As Garry points out, as companies grow, they spend money to feel professional. They add tools because someone recommended them. They add layers because it feels grown-up. They add process because it looks like control. They add roles because it feels safer than making a hard choice about what to stop. And then they end up with three to ten times as many tools as they should (just look at the average number of SaaS tools in an organization), and spend two to three times as much as they should be. And the processes they add are not the right processes because they don’t have the expertise to define best-in-class sales, marketing, procurement, etc. processes because they don’t have a seasoned CRO, CMO, or CPO to define them. They hire people they don’t need to get stuff done that should be automated or simplified by better processes (that could only be defined by the right senior people who should be hired at the right time, and funds saved until they can be).
This is another reason why you need a CPO early. A CPO will vet not only the reason, but the ROI, of every proposed product/platform and prevent unnecessary purchases and, if something is required, find the best product/platform. They will prevent processes that don’t add value. And they can even help determine when hires are really needed or when better platforms and processes can delay the need.
Procurement will focus their spend on the things that improve outcomes. And they will happily cut the things that improve optics because optics don’t carry you through volatility. Cash and speed do. And Procurement will help you conserve cash and act as fast as it is prudent to.
As Garry states A “good company” that has protected margin and kept agility will outlast a “professional company” that has simply become expensive. And a good company is one that puts Procurement front and center. After all, as Coase clarified, Procurement is the reason a company exists!
