Must read PL resource
Talent-related issues are now CPOs’ fourth-highest priority but how effective are procurement chiefs at developing their staff?
READ MOREKey takeaways
Future-proof your team by honing next-generation capabilities that may be laying dormant. A panel on procurement talent – which included leaders from Heineken, Nokia and Proxima – identified challenging, influencing and persuading, and internal and external networking as vital future skills.
Be deliberate and proactive in building diversity into your team. Research indicates diversity and inclusion fosters happier and higher-performing teams.
Develop role specialisations within your teams to encourage a long-term focus. Len DeCandia, CPO at J&J, said specialisation may give staff a greater sense of accountability and purpose, encouraging excellent execution.
Respondents to a Future Procurement Leaders pulse say their deficiencies lie largely within ‘soft skills’ – leadership, emotional intelligence, strategy skills and business acumen account for 56% of skill gaps
Pulse: Future Procurement Leaders, Q1 2019
Must read PL resource
Many procurement functions do not communicate their contribution to the wider business. Year after year, these teams fail to make an impact because their KPIs are misaligned or disconnected
READ MOREKey takeaways
Focus on the longevity of stakeholder relationships and pick your battles wisely. Rather than debate mismatched savings figures, BT group CPO Hari Sundaresan sets and rewards his buyers on targets that may not align with those recognised by finance.
Crowdsource answers to your biggest problems from business partners; staff throughout the business often have the answers to procurement’s challenges. Leaders such as Siemens CPO Klaus Staubitzer have used employee forums to share ideas and accelerate digitalisation.
Invest in technology and empower staff to challenge the function’s business partners. Insights derived from spend analytics tools enable procurement professionals to ask strategic questions such as: “Does this help to grow the business or could we spend money more wisely?”
The difference between leading and lagging Procurement teams? Nine percentage points of EBITDA. If you’re not using your CPO as a C-suite copilot, you’re missing out
Procurement Leaders CEO Nandini Basuthakur quotes recent McKinsey research on the function’s impact
Must read PL resource
Automating procurement processes is the quickest way to find efficiencies and empower the function to perform more effectively
READ MOREKey takeaways
Establish a formal governance process by which to clean, process and format data but accept it will never be 100% accurate. This will enable the function to quickly use and act on the information.
Develop a clear six- or 12-month plan for how your digital processes and activities will fit into the existing corporate strategy. This will help secure support and resources to enable these activities without the distraction and complexity of long-term roadmapping.
Focus on describing the benefits of digital solutions that augment procurement teams to neutralise their fear of replacement. This will help staff embrace the digitalisation process faster.
The future value proposition of procurement is digital. Developing automation and, as a result, better efficiencies in the function will unlock this
Henrik Larsen, CPO at AP Moller Maersk
Must read PL resource
Identify skills gaps at both an individual and team level and assess whether these deficiencies could be resolved by a job rotation
READ MOREKey takeaways
Advertise the versatility of procurement roles and demonstrate how spending time in the function can help fast-track career development. This makes procurement stand out as a viable career destination – a true general manager of business.
Prioritise investing in technology to automate high-volume, low-value tasks. Enabling staff to spend more time on higher-value activities will ultimately enable procurement to deliver greater business impact.
Rotate staff to build their business acumen, widen the talent pool and develop the consultative skills procurement professionals require to be strategic business partners. Although many functions have struggled to achieve this, Maersk has demonstrated it is possible.
Procurement can attract more talent by emphasising that the function is on par with sales when it comes to exposing people to commercial influence. These opportunities are highly valued by ambitious professionals
Monique Beersma, head of global procurement indirect materials and services, Givaudan
Must read PL resource
Advances in technology offer procurement teams a huge opportunity to increase efficiency and improve decision-making
READ MOREKey takeaways
Use data to encourage accountability and drive behavioural change. EY has developed dashboards for staff that highlight compliance with travel policies and present CO2 emissions from journeys so it can reduce travel costs, increase transparency and improve sustainability.
Leverage your supply network to access data or sources of innovation when budgets are constrained. Adam Baird, senior EMEA procurement manager at S&P Global, says it is possible to leverage the innovations of suppliers that are working with other customers on exciting projects.
Prioritise procurement digitalisation projects that benefit both procurement and the wider business. Marco Romano, procurement data and analytics officer at IBM, says he disregards projects that do not deliver outcomes for both.
The next battleground for organisations is not technology, but talent
Daniel Hulme, CEO, Satalia
Must read PL resource
The emergence of category management revolutionised purchasing. But, like any theory or concept, it needs to evolve and align more closely with the overarching priorities of the business
READ MOREKey takeaways
Encourage stakeholder engagement by ensuring purchasing processes do not slow time-to-market or stand in the way of innovation. Although cost savings are important, stakeholders may consider R&D support or supplier-enabled innovation to be of greater value.
At the start of any project, meet with stakeholders to discuss the details and decide on budgets and expected outcomes. This will ensure procurement staff have a greater understanding of the business’s objectives – both at a category and a functional level.
Category managers and buyers must have the courage to challenge stakeholders and question whether what they ask for is truly what they need. Instead, procurement professionals should offer alternatives based on their market intelligence.
Procurement must become a value chain function, where the focus is on winning as a team with business partners and where it orchestrates the wider business’s success – rather than acting as a financial admin organisation
Dietmar Harteveld, head of SCM – EMEA, Siemens
Must read PL resource
Category managers need to be forward-thinking and focus on end customers’ requirements to provide the business with greater value
READ MOREKey takeaways
Design your function in a way that enables alignment with the organisation – either by mirroring the structure of the business or creating a clearly defined business-partnering role. Vattenfall, for example, has delivered cross-functional synergies and successful collaboration by reorganising the procurement team to align with business units and embedding procurement specialists.
Five hours The amount of time category managers spend each week developing cross-functional teams, on average
Category management and business alignment: Delivering value beyond savings, Procurement Leaders
Must read PL resource
Many functions have been unable to adopt advanced digital applications and around one-third of procurement professionals say a shortage of skills hinders their efforts
READ MOREKey takeaways
Advanced technology offers procurement teams an opportunity to make decisions quickly and efficiently – freeing staff to build stronger, more valuable relationships with stakeholders and suppliers. Teams investing in technology-enabled risk management programmes, for example, are driving engagement with stakeholders and offering new forms of value through supply chain transparency, brand protection or cost avoidance.
$50m Savings through cost avoidance delivered by Brose’s Argos risk management solution
Must read PL resource
While supplier collaborations offer buying organisations a number of benefits, many in procurement limit the impact of such initiatives by being overly focused on cost savings
READ MOREKey takeaways
Adjust your function’s mindset and culture to ensure supplier relationship management (SRM) produces results. Harm Veerkamp, founder of AIE Company, said successful supplier partnerships require open engagement, curiosity, a focus on reciprocal value creation, and an even balance of power between the parties.
49% The proportion of collaborative projects led by buying organisations with a supplier relationship management programme in place that end in failure
Supplier relationship management, Procurement Leaders
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