Monthly Archives: June 2026

Sorry Garry, but you don’t need a Decision Ladder … you just need Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing

because your decision ladder is baked in at the core! Even though we had no clue about it until you made your LinkedIn Procurement Decision Ladder post!

We reached the same conclusion you did — that decisions are not equal, especially in sourcing, and the cost of failure (and recovery, not reversibility — as recovery is never fully possible once a contract is signed, an order is made, or a shipment received, unless, of course, a Force Majeure event happens before any of that occurs) is paramount in how you handle the category in question.

Depending on the criticality of the category, and where it lies between low risk, low complexity, and low impact and high risk, high complexity, and high impact, you’re either going fast and fully automated with a high tolerance for failure (as one bad decision costs little and can quickly be recovered from) as per the first rung of your ladder or slow and methodical with decisions delayed until they are defensible and auditable at the top rung of your ladder (after all, you do have to climb up from the lower left of the lowest octant to get to the upper right of the highest octant if you are living in the Busch-Lamoureux Exact Purchasing Pocket Cube) or somewhere in between in the other six categories depending on the cost of failure and the cost of recovery.

When you know where every category falls, you know exactly how much planning, defensibility, and auditability is needed and, more importantly, how much human involvement. This makes it clear where you can play with experimental AI and where you can’t risk any decision not made by a human expert. (The machine should be used to do any and all analyses that are known and come to mind, but in high risk, high complexity, and high impact categories which have a high cost of failure and a high cost of recovery, as IBM wrote back in 1979, the machine should never make a decision because it can never be accountable for one — as that accountability always falls to you. And the courts globally are [becoming] in agreement with that.)

There’s NO Faster Path to a Markdown than “Growth At All Costs”!

THE PROPHET is bemoaning the start of markdowns in private equity when he should be happy (as a former investor) they took this long to happen, especially when the reality is that these markdowns are going to start coming fast and furious in any firm that wants to still be around by the end of the decade.

This is because most of their portfolios in Software, and FinTech/ProcureTech software in particular, have been pursuing growth at all costs as a result of:

  • the insane valuations during COVID for FinTech/ProcureTech that helped companies buy and pay online
  • the insane valuations during the current AI-HYPE for any company that could convince the investors they had a unique AI capability (even if it was just a clod or chat, j’ai pété wrapper)

… which has resulted in unreasonable, and practically unachievable, sales and growth targets being placed on them which they will not reach, especially in a flat, or down, market for software purchases as a result of the AI price squeeze (since “AI” offerings are currently cheap with the big firms underpricing compute costs to try and hook clients, even though it’s costing those firms Billions).

But as Garry Mansell, one of the Godfathers of Modern Procurement, has so eloquently explained in his can of worms post, growth at all costs is equivalent to self-sabotage. That’s because it comes laden with fallacies, traps, and brand value destruction!

Garry points out the three biggest harms we see every single time.

  1. Quarterly Earnings Trap: with the constant pressure to reach unreasonable, if not unobtainable, sales targets, it becomes all about delivering good news on the quarterly earnings call (whether to the public or the PE firm); it all boils down to revenue and cash in the bank, and sales teams are told to hit targets by any means necessary, including, but not limited to, deal-making, over-promising, and grand assurances the solution will solve that problem without any plan to ensure it will do just that once the deal is signed; this leads to unhappy customers when the implementation will take a year (vs. the three months they expected), the expected enhancement needed to solve that problem is pushed two years down the roadmap, and the customer support is non-existent (because all the support reps were fired to fund increases in the S&M budget to try and hit the insane targets)
  2. Heavy Discounting Fallacy: because it will get “not ready” or “likely to go with a competitor” customers over the line and get the deal in the door; first of all, it doesn’t always happen (as some customers see through it and then spot the “we have the right to reprice on a quarterly basis if your user base goes up, and we get to use LinkedIn growth metrics to do so” clause where, even if you hired a dozen janitors for your new office building or 50 fleet drivers for your new private fleet who never use the system, you will be charged for them anyway); secondly, even if it does, given that the smart ones know the old adage “you get what you pay for” is true, if they didn’t pay much, they will believe it’s not worth much and not put in the hard work that’s required on their end for a successful implementation (especially since they also know you can’t afford to, and thus won’t, support them at that price); third, voices carry, word gets out you’re cutting quotes 80% to 90%, and suddenly everyone knows (or at least assumes) you’re doing massive mark-ups with the sole intent of getting whatever you can (and not what the tech, and the IP contained within, is really worth — as you’ve just devalued the IP to the floor)
  3. Shelfware is the Reputation Killer that Keeps On Killing: Good software that generates value for a valued client that uses it daily is the gift that keeps on giving because a happy client, as long as you keep your prices fair, never goes away; but shelfware is the villain that keeps on striking at your darkest hour as that unhappy client will never tire telling people how you are robbing them blind in a contract they can’t get out of for software they aren’t using …

As Garry has said repeatedly, which SI has echoed repeatedly (while giving you a simple relative corporate debt equation to help you calculate how likely that vendor is pursuing growth at all costs, and, thus, likely to screw you [whether they intend to or not]), the only true growth is controlled growth with ready-clients at a sustainable year-over-year rate that allows all customers to be served to expected levels of service, all new employees to be adequately trained before being thrust into critical customer-facing roles, and all current employees to get the regular time off they need to prevent burn-out.

And, as Garry has also pointed out, where the model incentivizes utilization and renewal over implementation and sale, where every member of the organization is incentivized on those metrics, where the sales person doesn’t get a dime of commission until go-live and where the full commission depends on adoption and renewal, that’s where you will see success. (In other words, the sales person should NOT be happy if the client isn’t. That’s one of the best ways to de-incentivize bad deals — what salesperson is going to bend over backwards and/or pull every dirty trick in the book to get a deal he’ll never see a dime of commission on?)