Category Archives: Global Trade

Spreadsheets are not a Global Trade Management Solution

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Hiring expert compliance professionals and sending them to training seminars and conferences to keep them on their edge is laudable, but it’s not a solution if they return to a workplace that relies on the totally inadequate compliance tool known as the spreadsheet. Spreadsheets, designed for simple accounting calculations, might be reasonable for forecasting and budgeting, but they were never designed for applications that required advanced data management activities, including trade compliance demands, especially when the mere act of sorting can corrupt all the data in the spreadsheet.

That’s why I was very pleased to see these facts echoed in a recent Industry Week article on Global Trade Management (GTM) technology that was “a call to action to importers and exporters”. Good GTM, which delivers tangible ROI, enhanced revenue, and more efficient internal processes, overcomes the failings of spreadsheets and greatly reduces the risks of non-compliance (which can include massive fines and penalties).

Furthermore, GTM can allow importers to maintain more control over the process. They can verify classifications, insure filings are made on time, and track VAT that your company may be eligible to reclaim. GTM also gives importers and exporters:

  • advanced cost-estimation capabilities,
  • a complete archive of electronic filings at their fingertips,
  • automated transaction processing, and
  • true global visibility, where real-time visibility and exception monitoring allows problems to be solved before they become catastrophic.

For more information on the importance of global visibility, see the Illumination on why you need trade visibility and the white paper on why you need to close the loop with entry visibility.

7 Reasons Why Organizations Need a Global Classification Platform

Today’s guest post is from Clay Perry, SVP of Global Markets, of Integration Point, Inc.

It’s more than just an item master. It’s definitely more than just a spreadsheet. A Global Classification platform includes various and multiple forms of classification data, stores required documents, provides up-to-date trade content, and provides a centralized, web-based solution that all trading partners can access. Having trouble selling the need for a Global Classification platform internally? Below are 7 great reasons why any organization needs, and can benefit from, a Global Classification platform.

  1. Centralize product databases
    By consolidating all product classification databases into a central, shared repository, you eliminate the all too common practice of using spreadsheets to manage a company’s multi-national parts list. As a result, the centrally controlled classification database reduces errors, increases internal and external communication, strengthens compliance, and improves the timeliness of the information shared with external trading partners.
    (Remember, up to 90% of spreadsheets contain non-trivial errors.)
  2. Increase visibility
    Managing all classification data in one location provides visibility into when additions, changes, or deletions to the classification data repository are made.
  3. Improve compliance across the supply chain
    Providing on-demand availability to the classification database via the web ensures that every trading partner has access to, and uses, the same classification data at every stage in the supply chain.
  4. Minimize risks and/or delays in the supply chain
    Having the correct classification data in an easily accessible platform reduces the chance of shipments being delayed in Customs resulting in demurrage and other late fees.
  5. Share classification data to maximum compliance in other trade areas
    Involving members from various areas within the organization — from the shop floor to shipping department to accounting — provides better classification data. By collecting input, facilitated by an online tool, you ensure that all product data used for classification determinations is thorough and timely.
  6. Demonstrate reasonable care
    Complying with government regulations, such as the Modernization Act for US importers, is required by all importers and exporters. This means organizations must show they demonstrated reasonable care when deploying a solution focused on managing and maintaining accurate classification data.
  7. Manage trade preference programs applicability
    Utilizing a Global Classification platform, organizations eliminate the possibility of missing duty savings opportunities caused by not flagging the products in the classification database and sharing that information with Customs Brokers that these products are eligible for Free Trade Agreements.

Thanks, Clay.

For more information on closing the loop with entry visibility, see the white-paper. For more information on why you need trade visibility,
download the Sourcing Innovation Illumination on Why You Need Trade Visibility.

The New Role of the Global Sourcing Manager

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A recent article in Global Services had an interesting article on the “roles sourcing managers play” in today’s global sourcing organizations. Whereas traditional managers were more focused on:

  • setting directions and goals,
  • communicating policies,
  • motivating the team,
  • monitoring and analyzing progress,
  • rewarding and punishing, and
  • reporting up the chain;

today’s global sourcing managers need to focus on:

  • a goal-orientation,
    that navigates the political currents and allows sourcing relationships to thrive,
  • process & domain expertise,
    that is backed up with hands-on operational experience,
  • entrepreneurialism,
    that perceives risk, understands the different functional areas, and builds cross-functional teams to help mitigate that risk,
  • global strategy,
    that takes into account cultural nuances, regulatory requirements around the globe, and the macro-economic factors that impact the supply chain,
  • integrity,
    that imparts credibility inside and outside of the organization,
  • negotiations,
    that lead to win-win relationships for long term success,
  • and the future,
    that allows the sourcing manager to adapt and respond to the dynamically changing global environment.

This is because, as outlined in the article, the responsibilities of today’s global sourcing manager transcend different functional areas beyond sourcing, procurement, logistics, and supply management, which include:

  • governance methodology
  • forecasting & resource deployment
  • contract review & change management
  • technology environment & improvement
  • reward and recognition programs
  • transition management
  • production planning
  • reporting & communication
  • disaster recovery & business continuity
  • financial performance

And to wear all of these hats, today’s sourcing managers have to be:

  • flexible,
  • contract oriented, and
  • governance aware.

Are Today’s Global Sourcing Objectives Really Disparate?

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A recent article in Industry Week asked if today’s “five disparate global sourcing objectives present a conundrum”. These days, global sourcing organizations need to:

  • be efficient and innovative,
  • master balancing insourcing, outsourcing and captive offshoring,
  • minimize risk while maximizing savings,
  • transition quickly with minimum disruption, and
  • accelerate results without a learning curve.

And some people might be tempted to argue that you can’t be efficient and innovative, that you can’t minimize risk while maximizing savings, that you can’t transition quickly without causing disruption, that there’s always a learning curve, and that you can’t insource and outsource and get results.

But one can also argue that true innovation increases efficiency, that true long term savings come from good risk mitigation, that good planning allows a quick transition with minimum disruption, that a learning curve can be minimized with a good training plan, and that you can insource and outsource by looking at functions, and not business departments.

In other words, it’s only a conundrum if you make it one.

Dick Locke On The Yin-Yang of the Business Universe

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Editor’s Note: This is Dick Locke’s first post as a regular contributor on Sourcing Innovation. (His previous guest posts are still archived.) Dick, who has delivered seminars to over 100 companies across the globe, is a seasoned expert on International Sourcing and Procurement who wrote the book.

Steven Guth proposes that “Procurement pros should be in sales“. He
implies, but never quite says, that procurement pros should have sales
skills. That’s right on. I’ve been there, done that and even got a
tee-shirt. Sales skills are essential, especially if you are in a
corporate central group that is outside of any profit centers.

Here’s the situation. I won’t mention the company name, but I hope
people will figure out who it is. They had a Corporate Procurement group
of which I was a part. I received an assignment to start up International
Purchasing Offices (IPOs) in Asia back in the mid 1980s. Funding those
offices quickly became an issue. It had been an issue all along for the
Corporate Procurement Group, with big annual negotiations and
discussions about how much each profit center would pay to fund the
corporate group. Now we wanted to add more people and expense for an
unproven new function. They might as well have painted a big target on
our backs.

The funding solution we came up with was that we had to generate our own funding and using us had to be voluntary. That meant we had to charge our users a fee and that we were in competition with two other groups. One was reps and subsidiaries of (largely) Japanese and European
companies who had set up a sales subsidiary structure in the US. The
second group was our own company’s buyers and purchasing managers in profit centers who felt they could source, purchase from, and manage
overseas suppliers themselves.

We realized we had to not only charge less than what sales subsidiaries
charged but also less than our profit centers felt it would cost to do
it themselves. We came up with essentially a sliding scale of markups on
purchase orders. Small users might pay as much as 5%. Large users might
pay less than half a percent.

I’m glad to say it worked. The operation was handling more than a
half-billion dollars per year in orders when I left. That’s not to say
there weren’t, err, “learning experiences.” One of our big issues is
that we had selected employees for their purchasing and engineering
skills, and not for their marketing skills. It required a tune up for
several of our people, not excluding me. It took about three years to
become fully self funded. If we had avoided some mistakes we could have
shaved about a year off that time.

It had some very pleasant side effects. We essentially were running a
small business within a big corporation. Our people got lean,
entrepreneurial and very customer-oriented. We quickly developed an
antipathy to bureaucracy. We became really efficient. It also took us out
of the annual budget battle and the annual exercise to calculate what we
were saving. (I refer to that as “lies, damn lies, and purchasing
statisitics.”) We merely had to state that we received x number of
purchase orders per day from people who didn’t have to use us and were
paying us for our services. That kept management happy nearly all the time.

Where is this model applicable? In companies where there is a lot of
independence on the part of profit centers, a center-led purchasing
effort, issues with funding the central department and finally where an
internal department can develop and market an advantage over their
competitors. Check it out, it may be right for you.

Dick Locke, Global Procurement Group and Global Supply Training.

Welcome to Sourcing Innovation, Dick.