We know that our last post said that we were done with our dumb, dead company walking, and smart company series, and officially we are, but if you’re going to make ProcureTech resolutions for 2025, then you should at least make good ones. So we’re going to give you ten great ones. The first five today. The next five next Monday.
#10 Cut the Cr@p
First of all, Procurement does NOT need to be reimagined! As per our post back in July, Procurement is not something to be reimagined as it is not something that should even be redefined at the core. The purpose of Procurement has not changed since the first known Purchasing Manual was published back 137 years ago. It’s the process of sourcing, acquiring, and paying for the goods and services the organization needs, and doing it in a manner that ensures that the products will meet the needs, at the best price, and show up at the right time — and that as many orders as possible are “perfect” (or, more precisely, problem free). No more, no less.
If you want to survive the coming consolidation that will see a massive amount of mergers, acquisitions, and outright failures, you need to sell. If you want to sell, you need to not only solve customer problems, but convince the customers you can solve theirs. And the best way to convince a customer you can, and will, solve their problem is to be completely honest and transparent about your solution, what it does, how it does it, and what it will deliver against the real needs they have. With no cr@p.
#9 Data Foundation
In Procurement, everything relies upon good data. Solutions require good data — platforms, the modules they contain, the algorithms that power them, and every other technical component. Moreover, the humans relying on those platforms require good data to make decisions — good data that is processed by analytics into good information that give the human professionals the insight they need to make the right decisions. (At the end of the day, it’s human intelligence [HI] and the best platforms support human intelligence with Augmented Intelligence.)
This requires doubling down on creating a good schema, collecting good data, verifying that data, and maintaining that data over time. It shouldn’t be just collect some data haphazardly, execute a function, push it to a table in the database, and forget it. Your solution has to be normalize and cleanse the data, validate the data, use the data as required, store it in a standard schema, and mark any data that can change to be reverified on a schedule.
Organizations need a data foundation. Make sure the data foundation you give your customers is enough.
#8 Risk Awareness
COVID (Pandemic). Special Military Operations. (Geo-Political Conflicts, Border Closures, and Sanctions.) Canal closures and more Logistics Challenges. (Panamanian droughts and Houthis in the Red Sea.) Tariff threats (that are soon to be reality). This is just the beginning. The soon to be total abandonment of climate regulations in the US (and possibly a few other “first world” countries) is going to accelerate global warming (if the number of bombs dropped in the Middle East over the past year hasn’t accelerated it already). This will result in more unpredictable natural disasters. The tariffs coming in the US are going to spark unpredictable trade wars. Monetary and oil shocks that will come from the BRICS allowing alternate currencies to be used, as well as pursuing their own, will lead to more risk and disruption. The ease in trade we saw for the first two decades of this century may never be seen again in our lifetimes. Risk is everywhere, and compounding daily.
Thus, you must ensure that your solution is as risk aware as it can be. Sourcing modules must collect risk information. Analysis modules need to collect and process risk metrics. SXM modules need to track all available qualitative and quantitative risk information about every supplier being used. Contract modules need to support, check for, and suggest risk clauses. Procurement modules need to bring up risk information before every order, and automatically block suppliers where the risk has become too great.
Risk is critical. That’s why Sourcing Innovation did a 9-part series on supply chain risk.
#7 Focus, Focus, Focus
Don’t try to be everything to everyone. Don’t even try to be anymore than you are. Procurement people are realizing that any company that claims this can’t deliver because you can’t be everything to everyone. Instead, focus on your core modules and strengths, define your ICP, double down on your value prop, and focus on being the best you can on those modules and strengths.
Doing so will increase your chances of customer success, and customer success generates potential customer interest. Plus, focus will allow you to optimize your sales, implementation, integration, and execution processes; get customers up faster; get them results faster; make them happy faster; and that will lead to renewals and, most likely, increased subscriptions at renewal time.
We’ve tried to hit upon this point throughout the years, most recently in our smart company series, but hopefully this is the year it will stick.
#6 Integrate, Integrate, Integrate
Since you can’t be everything to everyone, you need to focus. And since customers will usually need more extensive solutions than any vendor can offer, usually for specialized needs, the most successful vendors will integrate with complementary best-of-breed vendor solutions that will make it really, really easy for their customers to share the data they need between the applications they need.
The key is to support an end-to-end ecosystem for Source-to-Pay+ by integrating with all of the solutions necessary for your customers to support end-to-end Source-to-Pay+ solutions. Successful companies make their customers successful, no matter what. They work with partners and complementary providers as needed.
Organizations need platforms, not just point solutions. Especially since you need to be risk aware.