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  - September 16, 2008 -  

Supply Chain News: Is the Procurement Function a Corporate “Under Achiever?”



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Most Companies See Great Potential for Improvement, but Barriers Remain; Getting a Seat at the Strategy Table

 
 

 

SCDigest Editorial Staff

SCDigest Says:
Do procurement managers focus too much on “cost reductions” versus overall value, and the minutia of compliance with various procurement policies versus innovation?

Procurement management has taken on an increasingly strategic and important role at many companies, but in many respects still has a long way to go to reach maximum performance, according to a new study sponsored by KPMG (see Beyond Purchasing: Next Steps for the Procurement Profession.)

The report, based on surveys of nearly 600 company executives from across the globe, was conducted for KMPG International by the Economist Intelligence Unit, and presents an interesting look at a number of key procurement issues.

The potential for improvement is clear and needed, say the authors – but companies need to think more strategically to obtain maximum procurement value.

“Many organizations begin reorganizing and improving their procurement after they realize that they are not achieving maximum cost savings, and that their business units are not pleased with the procurement function,” says the report. “However, they reorganize without a clear idea of what is wrong with the function or how they want it to work once it’s been reorganized. Consequently this realignment doesn’t achieve its goals, and procurement continues to be the corporate underachiever.”

Procurement Improvement High on the Corporate Priority List

A full 74% of respondents consider procurement performance to be either “High” or “Very High” on the corporate priority list – perhaps not surprising in a period of rapidly rising commodity-related costs, but also probably reflective of a growing appreciation for the role that procurement can play in improving the supply chain and bottom line. That includes, for example, a growing role in driving supply chain and product innovation.

(Sourcing and Procurement Article - Continued Below)

 
 
CATEGORY SPONSOR: SOFTEON

 

 
 

But, barriers remain to procurement moving up on the corporate ladder. As shown in the chart below, there are disconnects in perceptions between procurement execs and other company managers. Procurement-related staff thinks the biggest barrier to procurement becoming more strategic is the lack of understanding or interest by other functions in that evolution; conversely, executives outside of procurement think the biggest barrier is that procurement managers don’t well understand the business.

Executives from both areas, however, largely believe procurement skills should be better utilized earlier in the process when making sourcing and related decisions.

Source: KPMG International

Do procurement managers focus too much on “cost reductions” versus overall value, and the minutia of compliance with various procurement policies versus innovation?

53% of non-procurement executives either agree or strongly agree with statement that the procurement function is too focused on cost and not enough on value, and another 40% say the same about the focus on policies versus innovation. An additional sizable percentage was neutral on both questions, meaning a small percentage of respondents actually disagreed with those statements.

Not surprisingly, the answers from procurement-related executives were more positive, but this again highlights a strong perception gap.

Source: KPMG International

Bell Canada Drives Alignment – and Results

Jeff Gallant, Vice President Procurement at Bell Canada, offers some thoughts in the report about how the procurement function can add more value and move up the chain.

“Often companies do a great job of negotiating cost savings with the supply base but cannot materialize it in the organization,” Gallant says. “To do so, it has to be an inclusive and collaborative process with other business units.”

Gallant says a re-energized procurement function at Bell Canada saved the company hundreds of millions of dollars in 2006 and 2007. How? In part, by putting real wood behind the procurement arrow.

For example, once procurement is ready to implement savings, “We develop a detailed, analytical business case at the business unit level, to determine each units' cost savings,” Gallant says.

It presents the on-going results of the cost reduction efforts monthly to the business unit controllers, who all participate in a “Benefits Realization Council.”

When a controller signs off on the savings, as happens for about 90 percent of the reductions which procurement identifies, “the budgets get pulled out, and the business unit is motivated to use the strategy,” Gallant adds.

The Bell Canada procurement team assists further by helping with change management, and analyzing spend at the unit level.

The report offers a wide variety of other insights and data useful to both procurement managers and other functions.

“The research shows that organizations understand that they cannot operate without reference to the markets in to which they sell: this is also true of the Markets from which they purchase their inputs,” the report notes. “Procurement is the part of the business most exposed to the latter and therefore a potentially important source of information not apparent to other executives on opportunities, innovation, competitor behavior, best practice, and certain risk issues.”

Do you agree with the researcher data on barriers to raising the profile of the procurement function? What do you think needs to change inside or outside most procurement organizations? Do you like Bell Canada’s approach of a “Benefits Realization Council?”  Let us know your thoughts at the Feedback button below.

 
     
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