Category Archives: Best Practices

Breaking Down The Barriers:Competing Priorities/Overcommitment/Lack of Buy-in

We’re continuing our foray into the top barriers to success that we outlined in our top barriers post that chronicles the barriers that keep coming up over and over again in every Procurement survey in our effort to ensure that you don’t have to read another state of procurement study for the next 5 years. Today it’s a matter of priorities.

A Brief History …

Once upon a time, in the Industrial Revolution and the Gilded Age that followed, there was only one priority for a business. Make profit. That was it. The rich controlled the businesses, the government, and the economy, so their only priority was their priority, and their priority was to stay rich and get richer. (Now, it could be argued that this is the situation today, and in many countries, it certainly is, again, but there was a period of time that it wasn’t.)

But then workers, tired of giving up 9.5 of every 10 cookies made to their rich bosses who did nothing but sit around all day in their sitting rooms and lodges, rose up and formed unions. Despite the best efforts of union busters, these unions became prominent and workers slowly got rights. About the same time, the masses, who were pursuing votes for all (and I mean all, in the early days in some countries, only the rich men could vote; and while we all, hopefully, remember women’s suffrage, before that the working class men had to go through the same thing in many of these countries and, honestly, really should have been more understanding when the women demanded equal voting rights, but this is neither a history site nor a feminist site so we will end this discussion here), slowly managed to elect officials that cemented the rights of unions and the working class.

Initially this led to fair compensation and worker’s rights that had to be respected, but when it became clear that companies were not only poisoning workers with unsafe working conditions (starting with the creation of asbestos and then hazardous chemicals and pesticides and PFES and so on), but the environment as well, then you had environmental laws to contend with. Then when mass marketing mania began in the 1960s, consumers began to realize how much power they had when there were alternative options to meet a household’s needs (as the increasing pace of innovation meant that it was only a few years before a competitor came out with a competing product), and the importance of brand management magnified. Then you had more laws, and sanctions, around import and export as global trade expanded and so on. Of course, this led to the rise in Human Resources departments, Risk Management departments, and even Brand Management departments in the larger corporations. Moreover, let’s not even discuss “Diversity Initiatives”, which fall under HR in the many countries they still exist in (because they have evolved from equal “opportunity” through equal “outcomes” to “outcome targets” and that is NOT equal opportunity)!

The Problem

Now, for every decision that needs to be made, you have a profit priority, an environmental/sustainability/carbon priority, a risk priority, a geographic priority (near/friend shoring, forced or corporate mandated sanctions, etc.), a workplace safety priority, and so on — and the “top” priority is different for every single department. HR: worker well-fare. Procurement: savings. Supply Chain: supply assurance. Logistics: carbon or cost, depending on the country. Manufacturing: quality. Brand: ESG. And so on.

The Necessary Realization

It’s a mouthful, but its existed for decades: multi-objective optimization subject to absolute and preferred minimums and maximums, and the estimated cost of breaking a preferred minimum or maximum relative to the dominant priority.

Basically, the C-suite agrees on an overall hierarchy of priorities as well as absolute and relative minimums/maximums and goals for each priority that have to be adhered to by each department, who will, of course, strive to put their priority first (but can only be allowed to do so to the extent that the other priorities aren’t compromised).

This means that, for supply chain, they can optimize for supply assurance and on-time availability provided that they meet the:

  • organizational carbon target
  • geographic priorities
  • cost targets (based on contracts, procurement models, etc.)
  • quality and safety targets

and that they can only

  • go above the carbon target,
  • choose higher risk countries,
  • increase the cost, or
  • decrease the overall quality

if the percentage increase in assurance is double the increase in carbon (or some other agreed upon multiple), prevents a significant stockout loss, etc.

Then, all of this can be fed into an appropriately defined optimization model that will present one or balanced scenarios that meets the absolutes and only misses a goal if it’s necessary to hit another goal or brings about more benefit on one dimension than detriment on another.

While not everyone will see the solution that Procurement, Supply Chain, Logistics, or (Brand) Marketing comes up with as optimal, at least their baseline requirements will be met and it will be easier to get agreement and encourage collaboration.

There’s no perfect answer here as there will always be multiple viewpoints, but if you can show that you took everyone’s priority and requirements into account, it will open opportunities for collaboration and get everyone started on the same page.

The Technological Requirements

The technological requirements are considerable and require supply chain aware sourcing and sourcing aware supply chain and expertise from source to sink and back again on both sides.

A continuing reminder that if you want guidance in the short term, hope that your favourite provider reaches out to Bob Ferrari of Supply Chain Matters or the doctor and enables us to focus on writing the series (or in-depth e-book) explaining what modern Procurement and Supply Chain Tech needs to look like (and how it needs to be implemented) to address the challenges, reduce the risks, and address the priorities versus just dripping out tidbits as free time permits.

Breaking Down The Barriers: The Talent Gap

We’re continuing our foray into the top barriers to success that we outlined in our top barriers post that chronicles the barriers that keep coming up over and over again in every Procurement survey in our effort to ensure that you don’t have to read another state of procurement study for the next 5 years. Today’s topic: the talent gap!

A Brief History …

As we have previously noted in our discussion of category and market complexity, with each successive innovation, business, and process improvement, processes and tasks became more complex and required more education and experience to perform. As a result, with each successive innovation, the available talent pool shrinks. When you consider that traditional post-secondary programs haven’t kept up with the pace of innovation in business in decades, there’s a lack of formal training programs, mentorship programs disappeared decades ago (and every time there’s a workforce reduction, the older generation is the first to be let go or be bought out), and most businesses haven’t invested properly in training in decades, you can see that, for many traditional complex tasks, the talent pool is shrinking quickly.

But the lack of talent in traditional areas is just one side of the coin. The other side is that technology is progressing faster than even technology professionals can keep up. Combine this with the recent SaaS explosion in most corporations, with some large corporations using over 1,000 different SaaS applications, and the increasing complexity of “AI”-X applications, and the talent gap is expanding in tech as well.

The Problem

The problem here, as we expounded upon in our brief history, is multi-fold. There’s not enough talent in many domains, and in domains where there is talent, the rapid pace of development and innovation is still leaving top talent behind.

The Necessary Realization

In theory, the multi-fold solution is easy, but in practice, it will take a lot of human effort to realize, just like execution support can’t be solved overnight.

1) Bring Back Training

Stop trying to hire someone with all the skills and knowledge they need to do the job that is at least somewhat customized to your operation and start training again. Formal programs. Ensure all the materials are accessible online all the time so the parts your employees tend to forget (because they don’t perform the tasks regularly) are quickly and easily accessible.

2) Mentorship and Shadowing

Don’t wait until someone leaves to start looking for a replacement. Start training a replacement for a key position within three months of someone new taking the role via shadowing and mentorship. Make sure there is no task that relies on one person (even if always done by one person as it’s not demanding enough to require more than one employee) and that there is always a backup person. Stop trying to replace teams with agentic software and start trying to empower small teams with augmented intelligence so they can do the work of teams three, five, and ten times their size but still ensure the knowledge remains in the organization.

3) KMS: Knowledge Management System

Despite being introduced in the late 2000s, these never caught on and this is, honestly, one of the biggest reasons we have a talent gap today. Not only do most organizations not do enough planning around succession for those that perform key functions (it’s not just the C-Suite you need a plan for), but they don’t capture the key knowledge built up by long time employees who know how to run certain functions efficiently and effectively. That’s why performance degrades over time as people leave and new people are hired because the days when you’d join a company and stay for five, ten, twenty years or life disappeared with the last millennium. When organizations failed to properly capture this knowledge when the first round of massive layoffs hit in the dot com crash of 2000, and then never learned from it (and we saw the same mass exodus of senior, knowledgeable, people in the financial crisis of ’08), we ended up with massive increases in the “talent gap” as the knowledge required to forge talent suitable for your organization was lost. (On top of the fact that knowledge was increasingly leaking to China with the global outsourcing system.)

The reality is that unless the knowledge needed to run your business is captured, you’ll never have the talent you need, real or virtual (as these new-age AI-based agentic systems that will, according to the marketing, solve all your problems won’t work at all unless properly trained, and they can’t be properly trained unless the right data, processes, and organizational knowledge are appropriately captured — that’s a big reason these efforts continually fail and will continue to fail).

4) Augmented Intelligence Systems

For well-defined tasks for which mature (pre Gen-AI) agentic workflows exist that can be appropriately defined, controlled, and tailored, implement such systems to ease the burden on new employees as they attempt to learn the role and be productive and strategic.

The Technological Requirements

The technological requirements, especially for the KMS and the Augmented Intelligence Systems, are considerable and require supply chain aware sourcing and sourcing aware supply chain and expertise from source to sink and back again on both sides.

A continuing reminder that if you want guidance in the short term, hope that your favourite provider reaches out to Bob Ferrari of Supply Chain Matters or the doctor and enables us to focus on writing the series (or in-depth e-book) explaining what modern Procurement and Supply Chain Tech needs to look like (and how it needs to be implemented) to address the challenges, reduce the risks, and address the priorities versus just dripping out tidbits as free time permits.

Successful Vendor Selection – The Series

Even in a House of Lies there is Truth!

From 2012 to 2016, Showtime ran a series called House of Lies, which was a comedy drama where a charming management consultant and his crack team used every dirty trick in the book to woo powerful CEOs and close huge deals.

And, unlike many consultancy teams, they were quite successful. There were TWO reasons for this.

  1. When they worked together, they brought the A-Team.
    • The Face, Marty, played by Don Cheadle, who was not only charming, manipulative, and opportunistic, but skilled enough in business to nail the spin brought by
    • The Brains, Clyde, played by Ben Schwartz, who specialized in marketing and spin doctoring and could craft just the right messages for Marty to deliver (and, like the Marketing Mad Men, partied a bit too hard and struggled with addiction), and who would have his plans backed up by
    • The Techie, Doug, played by Josh Lawson, who was a genius in numerical analysis and statistics and could find the right numbers to spin any tale The Brains and/or The Face need to weave to make the sale, and this was all brought together by
    • The Toughie, Jeannie, played by Kristen Bell, who managed the engagements, supported the team, and made sure the clients were reeled in hook, line, and sinker. (Without her, the team probably would have fallen apart, especially given the egos that had to be managed on the team. Don’t overlook the importance of The Toughie!)
  2. They came together, and even after falling outs, stayed together.

The third point is probably the most important.

A team is NOT assembled by a sales manager assembling four random consultants with “the right backgrounds” and throwing them on your project. Four random consultants who

  • might not even speak the language when it comes to your problem domain,
  • could be missing critical skills,
  • have entirely different work styles, and
  • are misaligned on what the right outcomes of a successful engagement for the client actually are!

An A-Team

  • speaks the same language,
  • have all the required skills between them,
  • work well together and have already succeeded doing so, and
  • are aligned on a successful outcome for the client.

In response to my LinkedIn summary on why you need The A-Team for Proper Selection Advice, someone asked how do you identify the right persons? The answer is, YOU DON’T!

The A-Team is already working together, delivering success. And in the case of the House of Lies, they succeed as a team by using their history together to effectively work together to sell the client a shared vision, even if the vision was one big lie. (So imagine the results you would get if you hired an A-Team to work for you, and not a consultancy that’s also an implementor that wants to maximize billable hours.)