Archive for the ‘Strategic Sourcing’ Category

Emotional Intelligence in Action

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2016

 

Today’s post is written by Heather Powell, Director of Customer Services & Project Manager at SafeSourcing, Inc.

Joshua Freeman, the author of At The Heart of Leadership: How to Get Results with Emotional Intelligence, and one of the founders of Six Seconds founded in 1997, Six Seconds is the first and largest organization 100% dedicated to the development of emotional intelligence. They teach the skills of emotional intelligence to enable individuals, teams, organizations, families, schools and communities to flourish1.

There are three steps to the emotional intelligence in action developed by Joshua Freeman:

Know Yourself — awareness. Increasing self-awareness, recognizing patterns and feelings, lets you understand what “makes you tick” and is the first step to growth. This gives you the What 2.

Choose Yourself — intentionality. Building self-management and self-direction allows you to consciously direct your thoughts, feelings, and actions (vs reacting unconsciously). This gives you the How 2.

Give Yourself — purpose. Aligning your daily choices with your larger sense of purpose unlocks your full power and potential. It comes from using empathy and principled decision making to increase wisdom. This gives you the Why 2.

The competencies of Know Yourself will help you see WHAT needs to change. The Choose Yourself tools will supply the HOW so you can put the change in action. The Give Yourself components will remind you and your people WHY this change is important 2.

We enjoy bringing this blog to you every week and hope you find value in it. For more information on how we can help you with your procurement needs or on our “Risk Free” trial program, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative. We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today.

We look forward to your comments.

References:

  1. http://www.6seconds.org/connect/about/
  2. http://www.6seconds.org/2007/08/18/eq-in-action-the-six-seconds-model/

Where do you get your news?

Wednesday, December 9th, 2015

 

Today’s blog is by Margaret Stewart, Executive Assistant at SafeSourcing.

Newspapers were once the go-to place for news. It was an all-in-one place you could learn things from global events to local yard sales. Today, newspapers still serve the same function, but with advanced technologies, more and more people get their news from other places.

Television and radio still provide news to many people daily, and this is one source that can usually be trusted for accuracy. The drawback to these, however, is that they typically only run for a small allotted time and may not cover all the stories you may be interested in. The news that is provided by television and radio is clear and easy to understand, so most people will make a point to be in front of their television every day at six, but it is still limited to which topics the news group decides to run.

For more coverage on any particular story, most people turn to the internet. Here, there is more complete coverage on a wider variety of topics, every niche of news that can be imagined. The downside to obtaining news from the internet is that the accuracy is not as easily regulated than that of television or radio. It is far too common to find inaccuracies strewn throughout some news stories, omissions to support an agenda or bias, or altogether fabricated.

Newspapers still hold the highest standard for unbiased, accurate, and complete news stories, but people often do not want to or have time to sift through pages and pages of stories. On top of that, most newspapers still cost money, so they must be purchased first. With technology, newspapers can now put many of their stories, if not all of them, online for convenience, but it still requires readers to search through articles and ads to find the stories they are interested in.

So, where could someone get news that is reliable, on topics they care about, and easy to use? An e-Newsletter may be just what is needed. E-Newsletters are fairly small documents, so there is not much sifting through multitudes of stories or ads. They typically cover specific industries, so the articles are most relevant to what someone is looking for, and, most importantly, they are generally held to a high standard of accuracy, like newspapers, television, and radio.

There are a multitude of e-newsletters available today, many that cost nothing. SafeSourcing’s e-Newsletter is one of those. It is provided free of charge every month and can be accessed online even without a subscription. It provides industry-related stories from reliable sources, so readers can be sure what they are reading is true, complete, and accurate.

For more information on SafeSourcing’s e-Newsletter, or on our Risk Free trial program, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service representative. We have an entire team ready to assist you today.

 

The importance of business social media

Monday, November 23rd, 2015

 

Today’s post is by Tyler Walther; Account Manager at SafeSourcing.

Your target market usually researches information about companies relevant to them and LinkedIn is a perfect avenue to do so. Creating your personal LinkedIn company page gives more exposure and visibility to your business, products and services. It gives potential clients and connections another touch point for discovery of your business and its offerings.

LinkedIn allows your company page to have followers. Your page followers are able to keep track of your company news, updates, and announcements. This leads to a worthwhile discussion; your company must keep the page updated with new topics, blogs, links to industry articles, and discussion topics. If you have a page that is not updated and never changing, you may as well not have a company LinkedIn page at all!

Company pages have recommendations just like your personal profile. Your satisfied customers can now easily recommend you, your product or your service. Having these recommendations well assist business over your competitors who do not.

Your company’s products and services can be added in your LinkedIn Company page. You can also add videos to each of your product or service listings. This gives you the ability and opportunity to showcase what you can do and what you have to offer, as well as giving a personalized touch to those offerings.

SafeSourcing manages a LinkedIn profile found on LinkedIn as SafeSourcing, Inc. We post blogs authored by employees, links to industry articles and fun, interesting information. Please give us a visit, we appreciate the connection.

 We enjoy bringing this blog to you every week and hope you find value in it. For more information on how we can help you with your procurement needs or on our “Risk Free” trial program, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative. We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today.

 We look forward to your comments. 

 

 

 

 

Taking the proper time in orderto prepare for your sourcing projects. The story of Ray and John Part V

Thursday, November 12th, 2015

 

Today?s post is?from our?SafeSourcing archives.

What are you doing to understand the results you are receiving from your projects?

We have spent most of last week looking at Ray and John, two procurement professionals who were running sourcing projects for containerboard for their respective companies.?? Ray and John took different approaches to understanding the containerboard market, suppliers, company atmosphere and in determining the goals of the project.? They had each executed their strategies and now needed to understand the results they received. Yesterday we looked at Ray?s results and today we finish our series by looking at the results John was able to achieve.

John works on a small team just like Ray does but long made the commitment to invest a little bit of his every week to try and stay up to date on the markets he deals, the vendors that are in it as well as to understand what is going on in his own company by scheduling periodic meetings with the department heads.? Due to the fact that John had invested this time up front, it made it easier for John to understand initiatives of his company, and trends in the market and with suppliers to form goals that accomplished more in his projects than just reducing price.

The final known metrics that John?s project was able to achieve were as follows:

?? Project Start Date – January 9, 2013
?? Number of Suppliers Involved – 12
?? Percent of spend being review – 100%
?? Amount of time spent doing research to understand project
o? 5 hours per week reading industry publications and blogs for the entire year
o? 10 hours reviewing current contracts and invoices
o? 15 hours spent researching other suppliers
o? 4.5 hours preparing survey and analyzing results
o? 2 hours per week meeting with other departments to understand what they are doing
o? 18 hours negotiating final versions of updated contracts
?? Additional Information Collected – Green Initiatives from Suppliers; Production levels for containerboard; Internal survey detailed division satisfaction levels, usage and the fact that two of his regional players had been acquired by National companies.
?? Amount of time spent communicating with suppliers – 2 hours personally, however his 3rd party strategic sourcing company invested 33 total hours on his company?s behalf to help arrange a price gathering process.
?? Number of Bids and Changes – Average of 47 bids each ? 564 total bids/changes collected in 37 minutes.
?? Savings Achieved? – 9% savings plus the average of 8-12% predicted future increases
?? Terms – Net 30 Plus 3% Discount on Net 20 collected from one vendor
?? Contract Length – One year contract with reviews against Indexes every 6 months; Discount of 5% on a two year deal but with the consolidation of vendors John?s company is leaning toward a one year deal and taking it back out in 12 months.
?? Number of additional suppliers supplying outlying divisions
?? Plan is to consolidate the 18 regional and National vendor group down to a Better/Best National program with one Regional? included to help handle on region that represents 45% of his overall spend.
?? Project Complete Date ? February 27, 2013 last contract was finalized

John had a goal to achieve ?value? for his company and in doing this he had to understand everything about what was going on around him in the industry and in the company.? This understanding allowed him to create a specification and scope that was extremely detailed and accurate for the vendor community.? After reviewing everything the attention to detail was not lost on the vendor community or the seriousness of the opportunity.? John had a plan with clear goals and was able to convey that successfully to the suppliers who showed up with additional discounts and pricing in order to win the business.

When it was all completed John?s year round efforts produced 3 great vendors, one of which was new, discounts for terms and larger orders that would be stored in his new warehouses and competitive pricing while avoiding a cost increase.? His final decision was aligned with the corporate initiatives for ?green? and woman-owned companies and reducing his supplier count would save his company hours of additional administrative effort.

You may be like Ray but desperately want to operate like John but without the staff or the time to dedicate at that level.

At SafeSourcing we understand Ray?s frustration and that is why our customer services team works with you to achieve great results while removing much of the work from your plate.? For more information on how we can help you with your sourcing projects, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative.? We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today

We look forward to your comments.

Taking the proper time in order to prepare for your sourcing projects. The story of Ray and John Part IV

Tuesday, November 10th, 2015

 

Today?s post is?our SafeSourcing archives.

We have spent the better part of the last week following the sourcing activities of Ray and John, two procurement professionals who were running containerboard sourcing projects for their respective companies.?? Ray and John took different approaches to understanding the containerboard market, suppliers, company atmosphere and in determining the goals for their projects.? Each executed their strategies and now needed to clearly understand and evaluate their results.

Ray?s strategy was focused on his three big incumbents and in getting them to improve their pricing.? Ray was not prepared to ask or collect much additional information from his vendors nor was he able to properly research the market and his company landscape to learn what was going on that he was unaware of.?? Ray was able to garner some limited information relative to his suppliers ?green? initiatives and was pleased to learn that all three incumbents were at some level of implementing policies and offerings that were aligned with his company?s new plans as well.

On average Ray was able to achieve locked in savings for 6 months and also avoided the 8-12% increases he had understood would be coming.? Ray was pleased with these results, however, because he had not talked to his finance department in a while he had no idea of their move to requesting Net 45 terms from all suppliers was only a few weeks away from being implemented and that he would have to have a conversation with his suppliers that would have had much more leverage prior to negotiating these new contracts.?? Also, because Ray chose to focus on the three big incumbents, the divisions using local suppliers were moving forward with business as usual and much of what Ray was able to save was going to be lost in increases in the outlying divisions.

The final known metrics that Ray?s project was able to achieve were as follows:

1.???? Project Start Date

a.????? January 7, 2013

2.???? Number of Suppliers Involved

a.????? 3

3.???? Percent of spend being reviewed

a.????? 60%

4.???? Amount of time spent doing research to in order to understand? the project

hours per week reading industry publications and blogs

a.????? 7.5 hours reviewing current contracts and invoices

b.????? 15 hours spent researching other suppliers

c.?????? 2.5 hours hearing about new company ?green? initiatives

d.????? 24 hours negotiating final versions of updated contracts

5.????? Additional Information Collected

a.????? Green Initiatives from Suppliers

6.???? Amount of time spent communicating with suppliers

a.????? 18 hours

7.???? Number of Bids and Changes

a.????? Average of 3 bids each ? 10 total bids and changes

8.???? Savings Achieved

a.????? 3% plus average of 8-12% predicted future increases

9.???? Terms

a.????? Net 30

10.? Contract Length

a.????? Two year contract with reviews against Indexes every 6 months

11.?? Number of additional suppliers supplying outlying divisions

a.????? 9 Suppliers representing 11 divisions ? These agreements were not included in the project scope

12.?? Project Complete Date

a.????? March 6, 2013 last contract was finalized

Ray?s goals were focused solely on getting a reduction in pricing from his three major incumbents and as a side objective, understanding some of the ?green? options and initiatives that they were either currently offered or would be offered in the near future.? While it could be argued that Ray achieved his goals, the case could also be made that the expectations he set and results of this project could have been much greater and could have resulted in additional value to his company.

Stay tuned tomorrow as the story of Ray and John concludes and we review the results John was able to achieve with his efforts.

You may be like Ray but desperately want to operate like John but without the staff or the time to dedicate at that level.

At SafeSourcing we understand Ray?s frustration and that is why our customer services team works with you to achieve great results while removing much of the work from your plate.? For more information on how we can help you with your sourcing projects, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative.? We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today

We look forward to your comments.

Taking the proper time in order to prepare for your sourcing projects. The story of Ray and John Part III

Monday, November 9th, 2015

 

Today’s post is our SafeSourcing Archives.

This week we are taking a look at how two procurement professionals approached the same containerboard project within their respective company.  Ray and John took different approaches to understanding the containerboard market and the sources of supply, and are now prepared to start looking at their changing company landscapes.

Ray is part of a very small procurement team and as a result he does not have nearly enough time to touch all of the areas within the sourcing process.  Ray also doesn’t have a lot of extra time in order to keep informed of the constant changes that are affecting his and other businesses all over the world.  Because Ray is not well-connected with other internal teams, there are new corporate initiatives being put into place in the form of new policies and programs that he is unaware of.  These programs could affect decisions he makes to source any number of products and services, especially in an area like containerboard.

Ray plans to source his containerboard from the same sources he has always used, and as an added step he will ask the vendors about any recycling programs they may have or that they are part of that his company may be able to use because his company had just had a ½ day event on how they could become better recyclers in the industry.

John’s team is not much bigger than Ray’s but he made a commitment long ago to have a monthly meeting or luncheon with the 12 department heads that he interfaces with. Four (4) of these have never run a project with John’s group before for but do have some opportunities they wish to explore.

When John last met with the HR department head he learned that the company recently received some bad press for not awarding some business to a company that was female-owned.  While the award was completely legitimate and the best company was awarded the business, it did bring up his company’s track record of working with minority-owned businesses.  In speaking with the HR director a new process was developed to collect information about the characteristics of the suppliers being considered in John’s projects so that the decision makers could have additional insight when making final award decisions.

When John met with the Environmental Program Director he was able to learn the breadth of his company’s new green initiatives, their new specifications on recycled product use and the programs they were trying to implement.  John was able to use all of this information in order to refine his containerboard specifications as well as the Terms and Conditions for this.

John also had a regular monthly meeting with the construction department head.  Three months ago he learned that his company was building two new warehouses on the east and west coast in order to handle overflow and distribution within the divisions.  John was curious and asked about the already spoken for capacity of the warehouses and was pleased to find out that they had each reserved space for potential projects that involved purchasing higher volumes in order to get reduced prices on some materials and product.  By becoming their own distributor, John planned to structure his project for containerboard in a way that gave him leverage to try and drive better pricing and create a flow of containerboard from the warehouses to divisions that were already getting scheduled loads.  This process also meant that we would be able to better control freight costs as the number and frequency of his containerboard deliveries from the suppliers could be reduced.

John now had a good feel for the market, suppliers and what his company was doing in other areas that allowed him to begin taking the next step of designing the goals he wanted to achieve through this process.

Stay tuned the rest of the week as the story of Ray and John unfolds.  You may be like Ray but desperately want to operate like John but without the staff or the time to dedicate at that level.

At SafeSourcing we understand Ray’s frustration and that is why our customer services team works with you to achieve great results while removing much of the work from your plate.  For more information on how we can help you with your sourcing projects, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative.  We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today

We look forward to your comments.

Taking the proper time to prepare for your sourcing projects. The story of Ray and John Part II

Friday, November 6th, 2015

 

Today’s post is our  SafeSourcing Archives.

In part one of this week’s post we began taking a look at how two procurement professionals approached the same containerboard project with their respective company.  Ray and John took different approaches to understanding the containerboard market and were now prepared to start looking at their supplier base.

Ray had been doing business with a few of his containerboard suppliers for a long time.  They were great people that were friendly and assured him at all times that they were doing everything they could to make sure he got the best price.  They were responsive to his needs and their track record for quality and delivery was pretty good as far as Ray had heard throughout the divisions.  There were, however, about 25% of the divisions that, due to acquisition or an allowance to be independent by the corporate office, had chosen other regional suppliers for their containerboard needs.  This 25% represented almost 40% of Rays overall spend.

Because Ray didn’t have the time to chase down all of the different suppliers being used by the acquired divisions and potentially disrupt his business  with potential vendor changes, he chose to focus on his existing vendor relationships and let the outlying divisions continue with business as usual.  Ray never had the time to really explore the mergers, partnerships and new companies that had developed since his last contracts were negotiated so, as many procurement professionals, he didn’t know what he didn’t know.

John too had been stuck in a place with a few primary suppliers and large number of regional vendors to supply his needs.  Because his automated contract management system had alerted him 120 days before the contracts were set to expire, he was able to send out an internal survey to the divisions  in order to ask them a few  detailed questions about their pricing, quality and relationship with the vendors that supplied their containerboard.

What he was able to learn through this process was very interesting.  Of the 24 divisions not being supplied by a major vendor, over half wanted to be supported by a national provider with better delivery performance.  He also learned that 2 of his regional suppliers had been acquired by one of his national vendors but had left the existing, higher priced agreement in place for those divisions.

Also through the course of sending out this survey, John was able to learn about a very large regional mill in the Midwest who traditionally had been primarily a newsprint manufacturer, but because of the decrease in printed media and the increase in the need for containerboard, had converted over 45% of their manufacturing capabilities to producing containerboard thereby increasing the competition in that area of the country where coincidently several of his company’s divisions were located.

The final issue John was able to learn upon  follow-up from a few surveys that  contained negative comments, was that the quality of one of his major National suppliers was beginning to suffer.  When he asked the division presidents why they had not mentioned this before, they all said that it was more of a nuisance than it was a real problem and that while it had been getting worse, it was not preventing them from hitting their numbers.

Armed with this information John had a complete picture of his current National and Regional supplier landscape as well as information relative to a few new suppliers that he had not known of with which to prepare for his sourcing project.  He know had what he needed to begin reaching out internally for how far he could go to make the changes that would benefit his company the most.

Stay tuned this week as the story of Ray and John unfolds.  You may be like Ray but desperately want to operate like John but without the staff or the time to dedicate for that level of performance.

At SafeSourcing we understand Ray’s frustration and that is why our customer services team works with you to achieve great results while removing much of the work from your plate.  For more information on how we can help you with your sourcing projects, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative.  We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today.

We look forward to your comments.

Is it time to upgrade your television or televisions

Tuesday, October 27th, 2015

 

Today’s post is by Troy Lowe; Vice President of Development at SafeSourcing.

Sometimes personal sourcing requires the same skillset as corporate sourcing.

If you’ve been holding back on upgrading your television now might be the right time. 4K televisions have been available but were not practical because the highest resolution for content has been 1080P.  In recent months, content providers have been increasing their amount of 4K content.  Some of these providers are Netflix, Amazon, UltraFlix, YouTube and DirectTV.  Also, keep in mind that the 4K televisions can convert the lower resolutions to give you a higher quality image.  With the 4k content quickly becoming accessible, you may want to add this technology into your research.  Besides resolution there are many other things to factor into your decision.

Below are some other features to keep in mind when doing your research.

  • Refresh Rate
  • Display Types
  • Available Inputs
  • Available Applications
  • Size
  • Sound Quality

If you are planning on upgrading and would like some help, we can gather all the necessary information for you and help you decide which technology meets your needs. If you would like more information on how SafeSourcing can help you, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service representative.  We have an entire team ready to assist you today.

 

We look forward to your comments.

 

 

 

What’s your BHAG?

Friday, October 2nd, 2015

 

Today’s post is by Michael Figueroa, Project Manager at SafeSourcing

A BHAG (pronounced bee-hag) is a statement regarding your company’s strategy that may be too extreme for an external audience, but inspiring and directional for those conducting everyday business. The term was originally coined by Jim Collins and Jerry Porras in their book Built to Last[1], as a tool for achieving long term strategic goals. Used properly, a BHAG can be a powerful way to communicate the ambition of the company, and align the efforts of a team. But what make up the components of this statement?

A BHAG must be:

  • Inspiring: Emotionally compelling, motivational to the team
  • Attainable: Difficult enough to be audacious, but not so impossible that no one will attempt it. “Out of reach but not out of sight” as the old maxim goes.
  • Company appropriate: Aligns with your mission and core competencies
  • Long term: 10-30 years, or unless your organization exists to solve a certain problem within a certain timeframe.

Some examples of publicized BHAGs:

  • Susan G. Komen for the Cure: A world without breast cancer.
  • Amazon: Our vision is to be earth’s most customer centric company; to build a place where people can come to find and discover anything they might want to buy online.
  • Microsoft: A computer on every desk and in every home
  • John F. Kennedy: Land a man on the moon by the end of this decade and return him safely

Collins and Porras also recommended that a company develop its BHAG while in its infancy rather than wait for it to reach a mature size in order to help the company stay focused in its crucial developing years. Your organization needs to be adaptive of course; however its core reason for existing should not. Throughout the life of your organization, many targets of opportunity will arise, but identifying your BHAG in your professional or personal life will help you keep on course.

For more information on how SafeSourcing can assist your team with this process or on our “Risk Free” trial program, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative. We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today.


[1] <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Built_to_Last:_Successful_Habits_of_Visionary_Companies>

Considerations when Sourcing Globally

Monday, August 17th, 2015

 

Today’s post is by Tyler Walther; Account Manager at SafeSourcing. Tyler details important considerations when sourcing with global suppliers.

According to Wikipedia, Global sourcing is “proactively integrating and coordinating common items and materials, processes, designs, technologies, and suppliers across worldwide purchasing, engineering, and operating locations.” Global sourcing offers many benefits, including lower pricing, quicker delivery times and wide-ranging supply groups. Here are a few factors to consider when sourcing globally.

1. Product Quality: The most important aspect to consider is the quality of the product being sourced. If the quality is subpar or not up to standard, the cost is effectively immaterial. It is important that quality and specification standards are defined so that the supplier and buyer understand and are in agreement. If there are issues with the quality of the product, it is much harder to address with a vendor through different cultures, time zones and geographies.

2. Cost: Assuming the lowest cost is the best route is not always correct. There are other aspects to take into consideration such as transportation, customs and duties, brokerage services (both at origin and destination), banking fees, financing and insurance.

3. Logistical Capability: You must be able to receive the products. What type of international transport is available? Is there reliable transportation infrastructure in the country of origin? Weather and seasonal variations should also be taken into consideration. Events such as the tsunami of 2004, earthquakes and hurricanes can have lasting effects on suppliers located in the affected region.

These are a few factors to consider when making global sourcing decisions. Once an informed decision is made, there is opportunity for profitable business in the global market. We enjoy bringing this blog to you every week and hope you find value in it.   For more information on how we can help you with your procurement needs or on our “Risk Free” trial program, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service Representative.  We have an entire customer services team waiting to assist you today.

We look forward to your comments.