Strategic sourcing and procurement is a crucial process that aids businesses to balance revenue growth strategies, smart cost containment, sourcing and operations configuration.
“When the economy’s going down, people aren’t making as much money as before,” says Scott Bellinger, BluWave’s co-head of research and operations. “Even if they’re maintaining or increasing their sales, the cost is going up. Every dollar you can capture in a downturn is huge for business.”
The process entails a strategic outlook on possibilities and requires a well-executed implementation to achieve lower total cost and support revenue growth. In essence, the objective is to attain a balance between operational efficiency and financial performance.
“There are companies that are really trying to build out a platform that allows them to be a strategic sourcing provider to large manufacturers,” says one of our BluWave-grade service providers, Don Jenkins* of Supply Chain Management Co. “So they’re going to help them acquire components from around the world from suppliers. They’re going to administer those contracts. They’re going to handle the logistics of any regulatory issues that fall into that.”
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Strategic sourcing is an integral part of supply chain management that provides a systematic approach to assure timely delivery of goods and services and decrease the risk and costs involved in the supply chain.
Investing in supplier relationships is a key aspect of this process. Let’s look at it in more detail.
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“I think where it gets more proprietary, a little more specialized, I think those areas are less likely to maybe outsourced,” Jenkins says. “Whereas when you look at kind of commodity products and commodity processes, that’s where the outsourcing’s probably more likely to happen.”
“The businesses are going to want to have strong relationships with those suppliers,” Jenkins says. “They’re going to handle all the logistics-related issues, and they’re going to administer those contracts.”
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“There’s not a large variance in pricing that exists because of the nature of the commodity product,” Jenkins says. “So you have different areas of the world, potentially, where you can go to get that product, and the magic is just having someone that can organize it, find it, administer the contract, get the logistics set up.”
“It’s like ‘What pieces of what we do can we outsource, not have to have our full-time resources committed to this and still get the job done?'” Jenkins says of companies’ approach to strategic sourcing. “In what cases does it make sense to outsource a product or service or process as opposed to trying to do it yourself?”
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Businesses are concerned with two types of procurement: indirect and direct.
Indirect procurement means cutting costs from anything that’s not core to the business product or service being done. Examples include company cars, postage, travel spend, telecom providers, and pens and pencils, to name a few.
Bellinger says expert third parties are highly motivated to help with this.
“The benefits would be that you can engage a firm that can take out costs of your business for non-core expenditures,” he says. “The beauty of it is these groups work off of a gain-share model, so they have an incentive to help you save money.”
Direct procurement, on the other than, is related to lowering COGS via things like components, manufacturers and resource suppliers.
“As your supplier base continues to raise prices, you want to engage direct procurement groups that can resource your suppliers on a lower cost profile,” Bellinger says.
“There are companies that have built up a network of supply sources and a network of transportation solutions to get a product from A to B,” Jenkins says. “If you’re a large manufacturer, and this happens to be a product that you don’t deal with every single day in large quantities, but every once in a while you need it, and when you need it, you need it badly, that is a pretty good candidate for an outsource relationship.”
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The expertly vetted third-party resources in the Business Builders’ Network understand the importance of strategic sourcing to get the most out of your investment.
Tapping into industry-specific service providers who know not only your business, but also your competitors as well as you do can provide a significant advantage.
No matter what objectives your PE firm, portco, private or public company has, our research and operations team will assess your needs and provide a short list of best-fit solutions within a single business day.
*Privacy is important to us. While the source and company name have been changed, these are real quotations from a real service provider in the BluWave Business Builders’ Network.
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