Category Archives: Best Practices

AI CANNOT TELL YOU WHAT TO DO!

And I’m so glad I’m not the only one saying it!

The (Strategic Sourcing Decision Optimization [SSDO]) Grand Master himself Paul Martyn recently wrote a great post on LinkedIn that made this exceptionally clear and how the real problem is knowing what to do.

Paul starts off with three critical statements:

  1. AI can tell you what’s happening
  2. AI can’t tell you what to do
  3. In sourcing (procurement) the hard part isn’t visibility, it’s choice.

More specifically, it’s making a decision when every decision has tradeoffs, constraints, and (sometimes dire) consequences.

Unless you have an operating model to make those decisions, powered by technology that can actually help you adhere to the constraints, make the tradeoffs, and understand the consequences, the best case with AI is you get overwhelmed with the complexity of what’s happening.

So if you want to be buried in data and complexity and pretend you know what you are doing, there are dozens of BS AI players ready to help you.

But if you want the ability to make good decision, understand tradeoffs, restrict your inquiries to scenarios that adhere to constraints, and model the potential consequences when things go wrong, you need decision optimization with multi-objective capability. That’s Coupa (Trade Extensions). Or Jaggaer (Bravo Solution). Or Keelvar (just Keelvar). Not some BS AI startup offering nothing more than a clod or chat, j’ai pété LLM wrapper.

And if you want to know how to build the right operating model backed up by the right multi-objective optimization model(s) (and save millions while reducing risk and increasing quality), you contact Paul Martyn. He’s saved Billions. (Whereas in 94% of companies, AI has effectively saved 0.)

Now for those who don’t know, not only am I one of the last original (independent) analysts standing in our space (20 years doing SI next month), but I am likely the last original strategic sourcing decision optimization model builder left standing too. (Mindflow [acquired by Emptoris], 2000. First multi-line item model. Before CombineNet [acquired by SciQuest, renamed Jaggaer]. Before Emptoris [acquired by IBM and sunset]. Before all of them. Twelve years before Keelvar. First model to do more: Trade Extensions, acquired by Coupa.)

So unless Thomas Sandholm or Arne Andersson want to come out of retirement and recommend someone better — it’s Paul Martyn. No one still active in our space goes as far back or has worked with as many platforms as he has. (And I helped a PM/Consultant who worked at 2 different optimization providers get hired at 3 others over the past 20 years, and even that doesn’t match Paul’s resume!)

Four Broken Procurement Processes You Wouldn’t Have With Exact Purchasing

Gaurav Sharma recently penned a truly great post on LinkedIn on 5 dated procurement processes/setups you can get rid of without AI or any tool whatsoever. This is the type of post we need more of because AI isn’t always the answer (and in fact, it’s rarely the answer), and AI shouldn’t even be considered until the technological needs are identified (which, if the right process is followed, require AI a lot less than the hype machine would lead you to believe).

Not only should you not have the five processes he outlined if you are a best-practice Procurement department, but 4 of them wouldn’t exist in the first-place if you built your Procurement programs off of Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing.

Let’s take them one-by-one.

Spend it or Lose it at the end of the year.

Proper Procurement, and the proper business operations it would dictate, would never have this because budgeting based on historical spend is bad budgeting, as is pricing based on historical price points. The era of global stability is over, natural disasters are on the rise, critical resources are becoming scarcer by the day, and logistics becoming uncertain and unpredictable due to the fallouts of sanctions, wars, disasters, strikes, and uprisings. As a result, what you will pay this year, and what you will have to charge to maintain a fair profit margin, will not necessarily have any correlation to what you paid last year, especially in categories where more than half of supply comes from a single country (such as rare Earths from China) or flows through a single chokepoint (like oil, fertilizer, etc. through the Strait of Hormuz).

Budgets need to be based on expected costs using the most up to date data at the time, and revisited every time a category comes up for (re)sourcing. And, most importantly, be based on forecasted demand, which needs to be up-to-date when budgets are created and updated regularly based upon category velocity and actual sales/utilization over a typical, statistically significant, time window (which will be different for every category). This is the key: budgets should be based on expected, and approved, demand and cost ranges — not fixed spend buckets.

And you need to make three critical changes to budget management to be successful.

  1. If the purchases are needed (i.e. buying less will shutdown a production line, result in a costly stockout, etc.), the expected spend can be exceeded (as long as all efforts are made to keep it as low as possible) and the organization will react by either increasing pricing or cutting elsewhere if they can’t.
  2. If the forecasted demand has been reached, it cannot be increased without approval (or approved forecast updates for input components), even if the expected spend hasn’t been reached.
  3. For discretionary categories, if the organization was able to delay demand (by finding a way to get one more year out of that cell phone or laptop, delaying hiring through better automation and occasional overtime, or simply pushing off MRO restock until the next major project started), expected baseline demand is NOT reduced for the next year. In fact, if a valid argument exists, unused demand may even be carried over. Organizations that can reduce or defer demand need to be rewarded. In the long term, you’ll save money if you encourage delay of spend until absolutely necessary.

And if you use Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing, you’ll have an infrastructure where you are able to re-compute forecasts as needed, query current pricing as needed, monitor for events in high risk or highly volatile categories, get alerted when you may need to accelerate an event, and have an infrastructure to take the right action at the right time where you aren’t sourcing based on a fantasy budget but a real, up-to-date, demand with real, up-to-date, market pricing.

Approval Chains

If you’re using Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing, you have regularly updated, agreed upon, forecasts and expected demand. You have pre-vetted suppliers. You have market pricing, contracts, purchase orders, and m-way match. Once the demand, suppliers, and contracts / bids have been accepted and approved, if everything matches, there is no need for a human in the loop. You configure the (A)RPA and let it issue the okay-to-pay to the payment system and let the payment happen. Unnecessary approvals add unnecessary time, create unnecessary work, and potentially cost you not only the opportunity for early payment discounts, but even fines if you don’t make the payment windows mandated by the UK, EU, and other countries for paying small suppliers.

PowerPoint Category Strategies

A PowerPoint dies as soon as it is presented. No one ever goes back to it. With Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing, for any high complexity, high risk, or high impact category (which are 7 of the 8 categories), you setup the necessary price, risk, quality, delivery, etc. monitoring systems from day one. You have alerts whenever a significant event occurs that could significantly impact your pricing, quality, or supply. And, for any category that is high impact, you have mitigation or response strategies already defined in your procurement systems that you can action.

KPIs that incentivize activity

In Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing, you define KPIs based upon success factors, NOT activity factors. You’re concerned with savings against market (i.e. cost avoidance), not historical budgets. If market prices went up 15%, you’re not saving over last year in any managed category. But if market prices went down 10%, you shouldn’t count any decrease in spend against last year’s spend of less than 10% as savings, because if you didn’t reduce spend by 10%, you’re doing a lousy job. It’s not resolved issues, it’s straight through processing. And so on. With Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing, you don’t have worthless KPIs in the first place.

The only process/setup it doesn’t eliminate is tolerating underperformance. That’s entirely a people issue, and if you have people that tolerate underperformance, they need to go. No process can fix that. Only your willingness to take action can.

* as a certain Western society does everything it can to pretend climate change doesn’t exist while its greatest ally does everything it can to bomb us to the next great flood as it unleashes over 2 million metric tons of carbon dioxide (tCO₂e) a month with the bombs it uses in a single conflict — a measurable level of emission equal to 0.05% of total monthly (tCO₂e) global emissions

AI Doesn’t Drive Savings, Innovation, or Performance. Sourcing Excellence Does.

And Sourcing Excellence requires (Strategic Sourcing) Decision Optimization.

As the Sourcing Optimization Grand Master Paul Martyn has clearly stated in his post on how Procurement is at an Inflection Point:

  • AI won’t fix Procurement.
  • Dashboards won’t fix Procurement.
  • Better Data won’t even fix Procurement.

ONLY structured, modelled decision making that gets executed in the practice of true Sourcing Excellence will.

And that structured decision making will be based on true multi-objective sourcing optimization that takes costs, risks, and goals into account to help you, the intelligent human, make the right decision that a dumb machine will never see.

And if you want to find out how that’s done, reach out to the Sourcing Optimization Grand Master himself who has saved Billions in his career WITHOUT increasing risk, liability, or complexity and find out how your organization could be the next to save millions (upon millions) while making less risky and more valuable decisions.

Sourcing Excellence Is Predictability in Tough Times

Sourcing Mediocrity, or worse, Bad Buying, leads to chaos.

Your costs are up.

Your delivery predictability is gone.

Your energy supply is intermittent and brown outs are becoming normal while those costs go up too.

Your taps are running dry.

Your workforce benefit costs are going up as healthcare costs skyrocket.

Your AI costs are going up as compute and consulting skyrockets and more consultant time is needed to deal with the results of bad, bad, hallucinations, that have gone beyond wrong orders, 3-way mismatches, and fraudulent payments to bad customer advice and legal claims that have put you in legal jeopardy.

This isn’t inflation. This is bad buying.

With good buying and sourcing excellence:

Your costs are stable — because you didn’t select risky suppliers, squeeze their margins to dangerously low levels, or make ridiculous asks that only add cost and not value.

Your deliveries are predictable as you’ve selected carriers that can support multiple routes and have re-routing plans in place if a route gets shut down due to a port strike, border closing, or “Geopolitical conflict” (i.e. war).

Your energy supply is regular as you were sure to build where the grid could support your energy needs, select providers (where you had a choice) that could guarantee the supply, and installed backup generators for key functions (and batteries for minimal lights and on-site computing requirements).

Your water pressure is through the roof as you ensured there was adequate supply and put contracts in place to guarantee it.

You manage your benefit negotiations carefully, put long term contracts in place, and work with the provider to prevent fraud (which makes you a customer of choice).

You don’t buy Gen-AI just because every brain-fried consultant and their favourite cognitively atrophied analyst is telling you to. You buy classic AI that works hallucination and error free at a fraction of the compute and cost.

In other words, you apply sourcing excellence end-to-end.

And you make good use of (strategic sourcing) decision optimization.

And you realize savings twice the savings of your peers.

But don’t take my word for it. Take the word of Paul Martyn, one of the original Sourcing Optimization Grand Masters who has sourced over 20 Billion dollars, and seen consistent results doing so over the past two decades.

And saved oodles of cash. To find out how much, check out this post on how you’re seeing your sourcing decisions repriced from bad buying. Then do the math on how much you could be saving (and, of course, reach out to Paul if you’d like someone to help you put a plan in place to save that money).

P.S. If you haven’t figured it out yet, if you were using Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing you’d not only know that you should already be using optimization, but where, why, and would have already reached out to Paul to help you define the program.