Procurement Gets Connected

Procurement Gets Connected

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Business is different todayCompanies own less infrastructure, inventory and manufacturing equipment than ever. They’ve outsourced everything from customer service to supply chain. And a growing portion of their workforce isn’t even on their full-time payroll.
Business is no longer about executing a process within a company, but across an entire value chain. It’s not only about the intelligence within an organization, but the intelligence of entire communities. It’s not about automating and doing things faster, but tapping collective insights and best practices to do things better—and in entirely new ways.
Welcome to the Virtual Enterprise. And a new era for procurement.
The Chief Collaboration Officer
Cost savings. Process efficiencies. They’re synonymous with procurement – and with good reason. The function has become a strategic enabler of business value by routinely delivering them. But a new term has entered the lexicon: collaboration.
Businesses in the 21st century simply can’t achieve their cost, revenue and cash flow goals without being connected. Empowered by business networks, the Chief Procurement Officer can effectively become the Chief Collaboration Officer, organizing resources and optimizing collaboration within the enterprise and across the supply chain to achieve new levels of innovation, efficiency, and agility.
There’s no doubt that procurement today is a different game. What’s driving the transformation?
Organizational Change
Over the last decade, there has been a fundamental shift in how companies are organized. Traditional vertical integration where everything was managed internally, or structures where suppliers supplied parts and pieces and companies did all the assembly work, has transitioned to a matrixed organization where different suppliers are doing everything from initial product design, partial assembly and postponement to managing final assembly and delivery to the customer.
Globalization
Today’s supply chain is no longer right down the street. It is stretched around the globe, and that not only increases opportunity for cost-savings, efficiency and scale, but the units that need to be reported on and opportunities for risk and delays. It also requires different cultural approaches, different mores with respect to labor practices, environmental conscientiousness, and the like that need to be managed.
Technology
At the end of the day, procurement wants to spend its time working with suppliers, developing supply, capturing innovation, and driving long-year roadmaps. But all too often, the basic blocking and tackling of negotiating agreements, managing suppliers and executing orders prevents them from doing so. Technology has changed this.
Charting a New Course
When it comes to technology, there are two phases that companies go through:
First, they automate core processes—sourcing, procurement and payables—to eliminate paper and hassles and gain transparency into order, invoice and shipping status. Second, they begin looking for the next level of efficiency and reach beyond the four walls to discover, connect and collaborate with their trading partners in entirely new ways. This is where this concept of business networks comes in.

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Extending the Enterprise
Companies have spent billions of dollars in personnel, reengineering and systems to improve internal process and information flows. Great strides have been made in sharing information and collaborating between employees and departments. Unfortunately, these islands of efficiency are often disconnected from the outside world and fall down where it matters most—when buying, selling or exchanging cash with other businesses.
Despite all these investments and advances, 80 percent of purchases, invoices and other transactions still take place offline or in a partially automated way, involving lots of paper and people, and resulting in higher inefficiency and costs.  As a result, businesses lose $650 billion per year in missed sales opportunities, higher operating and supply chain costs, and slower cash flow.
Such inter-enterprise inefficiency impacts nearly every corporate function and has hindered the performance of even the best-performing companies. Some examples:
At the plant level and on the manufacturing floor, managers struggle with poor visibility into order status, resulting in greater stock outs, higher inventory levels and poor buying and supply chain practices.
In procurement, limited order confirmation and status from suppliers keep manufacturers from taking new customer orders due to uncertainty of parts availability and delivery.
In HR and other departments, leaders are challenged to identify, engage and retain the skills and talent pools needed to compete in a rapidly changing, global marketplace.
Accounts payable groups are drowning in paper, waiting on invoices, rekeying data into their core systems and trying to work with procurement and suppliers to resolve resulting exceptions and disputes.
Treasury wants to do more with short-term payables cash, but limited visibility into invoice status makes it impossible to forecast, plan or optimize terms.
IT struggles with managing multiple and often costly methods for integration with external suppliers, customers, banks and other partners.
Considering all these pains and inefficiencies, best-in-class organizations are beginning to prioritize use of business networks to enhance collaboration and results within their companies and across their value chains.

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The Business Network Imperative
Personal networks from Facebook to Uber have made it simple for consumers to shop, share and consume in new and more informed ways. When shopping on Amazon, for instance, you don’t worry about connecting to individual merchants, banks or credit card companies. It’s all done for you within the network.
Business networks provide an equally simple and scalable way for companies to discover, connect and collaborate with the trading partners and resources they need to operate in today’s dynamic world. 
Take SAP’s business network. With a few clicks, companies can shop for goods and services, place and manage orders and pay for them electronically. They can view and manage spend across all major categories and manage their entire workforce—temporary and full-time employees alike. And they can engage customers across multiple channels—all through a single, connected platform.
Just as network-powered upstarts like Square and Airbnb are creating new models that are transforming entire industries, business networks are leveraging the automation, scale and ubiquity of the cloud to further simplify the way complex business gets done.
Fueled by networks, procurement can take a much more proactive role in integrating business processes and collaborate across functions in entirely new ways that drive value. Freed from the basic blocking and tackling of negotiating agreements, managing suppliers, and executing orders, CPOs can, for instance, engage in helping to manage the financial supply chain, turning payables into a profit center because they have real-time visibility into whether an invoice is OK to pay and whether it has it been matched against purchase orders and contracts. Or extending days payable outstanding to improve the overall balance sheet while at the same time offering early payment discounts to suppliers to mitigate both financial and supply risk.

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In the case of sourcing, business networks provide the ability to tap into a large global community of suppliers and get qualifying information for vetting partners they might never have known existed. And this not only leads to a high-quality supply chain, but creates greater cost efficiencies and mitigates risk—which remain critical priorities for the CPO.
The Future of Procurement
Procurement is fast becoming a platform for value creation. And aided by business networks, it will continue to transform and add strategic value beyond cost reductions and processes efficiencies. This value will come in four key areas:
1.       Product and service innovation
2.       Expanding into new and emerging markets
3.       Compliance and cash flow optimization
4.       Marketing and branding
It’s already happening. When Tata Motors set out to make the world’s most affordable car for the retail equivalent of $2,500, it was procurement that went out and identified suppliers and created innovative new materials and manufacturing assemblies to make the vision a reality. When one of the biggest mining companies on the planet laid out the uniquely bold objective to create the world’s largest mine in the outer reaches of Mongolia, it was the supply chain organization that went out and developed local supply and created entire towns, roads and transportation infrastructure where none existed.


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THE SUPPLY CHAIN ENTREPRENEURIAL SPIRIT IS ALIVE AND WELL

THE SUPPLY CHAIN ENTREPRENEURIAL SPIRIT IS ALIVE AND WELL



The Supply Chain Entrepreneurial Spirit is alive and well
When analyzing my connections on Twitter, one of the biggest words in my tag cloud describing my followers, next tobusinessmarketing and supply chain, is “entrepreneur.” I can understand the desire to associate oneself with this word as it is often linked to success-oriented character traits such as tenacity, optimism, passion and creativity. Luckily for supply chain processes, the boom in creative thinkers and doers has flooded into the industry, and new ways to achieve supply chain excellence are sprouting up all around us.
I partly credit the hit reality series Shark Tank (or Dragons Den for those in the UK) for the explosion of entrepreneurs out there today. During the show, businesspeople pitch their unique ideas to “shark” investors in hopes of receiving funds to help bring their new product or service ideas to the market. The majority of questions asked by the investors come back to supply chain processes (Where are you producing? What does your distribution network look like? How much stock do you have on hand?). In more recent episodes, people have been pitching their supply chain as a competitive advantage, including messages of transparency and promises of speedy delivery.
In recent weeks I have personally noticed the impact of the entrepreneurial spirit on the supply chain industry and want to share a few examples:
Procurious – Sharing is Caring
The final encouragement to write this article came after being asked by Procurious to contribute to the platform’s blog. This platform, designed exclusively for procurement and supply chain professionals, embodies the entrepreneurial spirit of next generation managers and encourages the sharing of information to increase collaboration and learning opportunities. Founding Chairman, Tania Seary, recognized a need (a fragmented industry in need of a makeover), gathered a small team of professionals, and created a platform that has now grown to over 6000 users worldwide in just over one year. The role of social media in supply chain processes will continue to grow, and Procurious has established itself as an early-mover.
Logistics: Who can deliver faster, and cheaper?
As consumer expectations grow, especially in the field of E-commerce, so too does the stress on logistics processes. Today’s “I want it now (and cheap)” culture has led to an influx of crowdsourced delivery service start-ups in the logistics industry. Basically, people bring items to other people while en route to a particular destination. This concept follows in the footsteps of car sharing, apartment sharing and other aspects of today’s sharing economy. The first company name that comes to mind when discussing this topic is Uber, which started as a ride-sharing service and has since expanded into a multi-faceted transportation company, with tests such as Uber Fresh (food order delivery) and Uber Rush (courier package delivery) under its belt.
Creative delivery solutions are however not just limited to startups. Back in April, Amazon and Audi announced their plans to develop a service that would allow for the delivery of a package directly to a car’s trunk.
This is definitely a sector to keep an eye on in the coming months.
BlueBlox & Coke Life
Back in June, I had the privilege of meeting two supply chain entrepreneurs at the European Supply Chain and LogisticsSummit in Barcelona. It was great participating in an event that encouraged innovative thinking and included industry entrepreneurs.
The first encounter was with Dorothy Diedericks, founder and CEO of BlueBlox. Dorothy recognized a need in the supply chain industry, namely the closure of the gap between the potential in emerging markets in Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe – and multinationals that want to conduct business there, but can’t due to numerous challenges. BlueBlox takes a modular approach to addressing these cross-border challenges, creating more visibility and increasing compliance.
Secondly, I sat-in on a presentation by Simon Berry from ColaLife. Back in 2008, Simon Berry and his wife Jane started an online “movement” which turned into an official charity in the UK in 2011. Essentially, Simon found it hard to believe that Coca-Cola was available in the majority of developing countries, but access to basic medicines was scarce. He had the idea of tapping into private sector supply chains to distribute anti-diarrhea kits in Zambia, where 1 in 9 children die before their 5th birthday due to preventable causes such as dehydration from diarrhea. After years of progress and innovation, it is safe to say that the entrepreneurial spirit of Simon and his small team has saved many lives.
WalMart Buyers meet “made in the USA” suppliers
In an attempt to improve its image and product assortment, Wal-Mart recently set-up a “shark-tank-like” pitch process that connected entrepreneurs with company buyers. Obtaining shelf-space at retail is not easy, let alone getting face-to-face time to pitch a product, so many businesses took advantage of this opportunity.
The pursuit of U.S. suppliers helps Wal-Mart gain some transparency in its supply chain and gives consumers more options both online and in U.S. retail locations. After all, according to Matt Kistler, Wal-Mart’s head of global customer insights, where a product is manufactured serves as a major deciding factor in purchasing decisions, second only to price. This forward thinking buyer-supplier set-up truly embraced the entrepreneurial spirit.
Closing Words
It is great to see the entrepreneurial spirit take over an industry that can use some more excitement and positive press coverage. It is safe to say that the supply chain industry has come a long way thanks to the tenacity, optimism, passion and creativity of industry professionals. The emergence and proliferation of connected devices, smart factories, and the sharing economy are sure to set the stage for more exciting times in supply chain and logistics.
Have you recently come across some exciting new projects? What are some examples of entrepreneurship you have seen in the industry?

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