Category Development Index (CDI)

September 7th, 2022

What indices do you use to assist in your category development?

 

Today’s post is by Ronald D. Southard, CEO at SafeSourcing Inc

What indices do you use to assist in your category development.

Often you can build your own CDI from data contained in many indices that are available via the web such as the Consumer Price Index or CPI, Gross Domestic Product or GDP and The Purchasing Managers Index or PMI that we discussed yesterday. Elements of each my find their way into your own custom Index od Category Development Index.

A Category Development Index, or CDI, is a trend analysis that indicates the turnover of sales of a given product category in a specific area. The CDI can give vital data for marketers to allocate advertising to specific areas maximizing product category knowledge and profit. The category Development Index is often used in conjunction with the Brand Development Index or BDI.

At SafeSourcing we often use a variety of indices in the development of our client-driven eRFI, eRFP and eRFQ or Reverse Auction strategies.

SafeSourcing is a Procure to Pay SaaS based provider of a number of e-Procurement solutions and associated white glove services that are part of our SaaS offered SafeSourceIt™ eSourcing suite. These include but are not limited to SafeContract™, SafePO™, SafeDocument™ and our SafeSourceIt™ Global Supplier Database that includes over 557,000 vendor/suppliers. To learn more, please contact a SafeSourcing customer services associate.

 

 

What is the Purchasing Managers Index or PMI?

September 6th, 2022

Do you use The Purchasing Managers Index in your sourcing strategies? Do you know what it is?

 

Today’s post is by Ronald D. Southard, CEO at SafeSourcing Inc

Do you use The Purchasing Managers Index in your sourcing strategies? Do you know what it is?

This useful index is one that many purchasing managers and other procurement knowledge workers use to keep up with the ever-increasing speed of change in our area of expertise.

The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) is an index of the prevailing direction of economic trends in the manufacturing and service sectors. It consists of a diffusion index that summarizes whether market conditions, as viewed by purchasing managers, are expanding, staying the same, or contracting. The purpose of the PMI is to provide information about current and future business conditions to company decision makers, analysts, and investors.

At SafeSourcing we often use this data in the development of our client-driven eRFI, eRFP and eRFQ or Reverse Auction strategies.

SafeSourcing is a Procure to Pay SaaS based provider of a number of e-Procurement solutions and associated white glove services that are part of our SaaS offered SafeSourceIt™ eSourcing suite . These include but are not limited to SafeContract™, SafePO™, SafeDocument™ and our SafeSourceIt™ Global Supplier Database that includes over 557,000 vendor/suppliers. To learn more, please contact a SafeSourcing customer services associate.

Sources:

Investopedia: Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) Defined and How It Works (investopedia.com)

Wikipedia: Software as a service Wikipedia

In Negotiations, Price Matching Barely Scratches the Surface

September 2nd, 2022

Why this traditional negotiating tactic is giving you a false sense of accomplishment!

 

Today’s re-post is by Dave Wenig, Senior Vice President of Sales and Services at  SafeSourcing

Every day, I talk with buyers of all sorts about their procurement processes. While I do get to hear some really interesting perspectives, I also get to hear some really old perspectives over and over again. One of the worst and oldest offenders is price matching.

It goes like this:

A buyer feels that the price she pays for her product or service is higher than it should be. So, she asks a competitor to provide her with a quote. She then takes that quote to her incumbent vendor and asks them to beat or match the price. It’s simple, and it is technically successful, because it delivered savings. I hear that this often generates 5-15% discounts. I’m not impressed by this.

What to do instead?

Testing the pricing in the market by asking for a quote is alright. So is asking your incumbent vendor to sharpen their pencil. But, it’s at this point that there is room for improvement. Any time your vendor signals that they are willing to offer a better rate like in the example above, they are tipping their hand. We now know that they are willing to reduce their margin to keep your business and that they do, in fact, have margin to reduce. It’s at this point, that we recommend applying a lever in the negotiation. An RFQ is a great lever because it creates an environment where the vendors are forced to compete live against each other for the lowest cost. Why have a vendor match a price and manually facilitate this slow type of back and forth? Let the vendors duke it out until they are done. Go grab some popcorn watch it happen. This will probably increase your savings by at least double.

Whatever you do, don’t settle for negotiating tactics that should have died with the dinosaurs. Modernize and use the tools at your disposal to win better.

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.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Life Cycle Costing

September 1st, 2022

Do you use Life Cycle costing in your sourcing strategies? Do you know what it is?

 

Today’s post is by Ronald D. Southard, CEO at SafeSourcing Inc

Life-Cycle Costing is a procurement technique which considers operating costs , maintenance costs, acquisition price, and other costs of ownership in the award of contracts to ensure that the item acquired will result in the lowest total ownership cost during the time the item’s function is required. Also considered in life-cycle costing is the sum of all recurring and one-time (non-recurring) costs over the full lifecycle or a specified period of a goodservice, structure, or system. This includes purchase price, installation cost, operating costs, maintenance costs, upgrade costs, and remaining (residual or salvage) value at the end of ownership or its useful life.

If you’d like to learn more about our service offerings that make it easier to understand your total product and or services costs, it’s time to learn more about SafeSourcing.

To that end, SafeSourcing is a Procure to Pay SaaS based provider with E-Procurement solutions and services that are part of our SaaS offered eSourcing suite like SafeContract™, SafePO™, SafeContract™ and our SafeSourceIt™ Global Supplier Database with over 500,000 vendor/suppliers. To learn more, please contact a SafeSourcing customer services associate.

 

 

Seller-Driven Auctions

August 24th, 2022

Seller Driven tools like eBay (See Forward Auctions) are not the only seller driven auction tools.

 

Today’s post is by Ronald D. Southard, CEO at SafeSourcing Inc.

A seller-drive auction is an auction where sellers post goods for sale and buyers will bid on them. A good example of a seller-driven auction would be eBay. A seller would place a particular item that they want to sell online, and buyers wanting to purchase that item will place bids trying to ultimately win the auction for the product (s).

An often-overlooked tool is an online Forward Auction. Forward Auctions can be used to reduce over stock and decrease associated loss prevention costs.

Online forward auctions are an ideal way to get the best price for capital equipment, materials, overstock, and services you may want to sell, such as when you need to liquidate excess inventory. There are two basic types of forward auctions. The first is a liquidation or Forward auction where sellers are reducing inventory from overstock or liquidation.

If you’d like to learn more about how SafeSourcing can assist in properly identifying and selling your overstock and other back-room accumulations through the use of a SafeSourceIt™ Forward Auction, please contact a SafeSourcing customer services associate.

 

 

Summer is still here, and Lobster Prices are still High!  

August 23rd, 2022

A year after this was originally posted, lobster is more expensive than ever.

 

Today’s blog is from our SafeSourcing Inc. Archives

As the nation moves past the coronavirus pandemic, lobster is more expensive than usual.   Due to a limited supply, high demand and the reopening of the economy, tourists are headed back to seafood restaurants and lobster markets for the first time in months.  Some stores charged $17 or $18 per pound for live lobster in May, and that was about twice the price a year ago.  In June, pricing is $13 or $14 per pound.  The wholesale price for live, 1.25-pound lobsters in the New England market was $9.01 per pound on May 1, business publisher Urner Barry reported. That was about $2.70 per pound more than the previous May 1, and the highest price for that date in at least five years, the company reported.

Customers are looking to get back out to restaurants, and that high-end seafood is in high demand, said John Sackton, an industry analyst and founder of SeafoodNews.com.

Some factors influencing the high prices include a lack of available inventory and what appears to be a slow start to the fishing season. New England’s busiest lobster fishing season takes place in summer, and many harvesters are just starting to get their traps into the water.

U.S. lobster fishing is based primarily in Maine, though many lobsters also come ashore in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New Hampshire. Fishermen managed to have a productive season in 2020 despite the economic damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic.  Fishermen in Maine brought more than 96 million pounds of lobsters to the docks, and while that was the lowest total since 2010, it was still much more than they typically caught in the 1990s.

For more information on how SafeSourcing can help your procurement efforts, or on our Risk

Free trial program, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service RepresentativeWe have an entire team ready to assist you today.

References

Patrick Whittle, Associated Press, June 8, 2021, 1:29

 

Will the CO2 shortage affect you?

August 17th, 2022

Another weird shortage that may affect a lot of people’s moral. 

 

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

Well, I was reviewing the news headlines on some of the sites today like I usually do and found another weird shortage that may affect a lot of people’s moral.  This shortage may make those of us that go out for happy hour a little less happy.  There is a CO2 shortage that may impact our beer supply nationwide.  CO2, carbon dioxide, is used to carbonate beer.  This carbonation is what makes the bubbles and foam which is particularly important to retaining the beers temperature.  The experts are saying that the CO2 shortage is due to a contamination issue at the only company in the eastern United States that provides the CO2 to breweries and manufacturers.  The carbon dioxide hub is located in Jackson, Mississippi and they are comparing the CO2 shortage to the same type of situation that occurred in the nationwide baby formula shortage that I wrote about earlier this year.  The carbon dioxide supplies were already very tight because all of the pandemic shutdowns that forced many of the key suppliers to go offline and they are still not fully recovered from that.  The summer is also a troubled time because the key facilities go offline for their yearly scheduled maintenance.  According to experts, the CO2 problem could be indefinite and may impact the soda industry next.   Below are some other things that could be impacted by the CO2 shortage.

  • Wine
  • Carbonated Beverages
  • Dispense drinks
  • Packaging of Meats, Baby Foods, Fresh Foods, and Baked Products
  • Decaf Coffee
  • Fire Extinguishers
  • Refrigerant
  • Oil
  • Pharmaceutical and Medical Applications
  • Aviation Fuels
  • Lasers

Interested in learning how SafeSourcing can help your company save money during these and other shortages?  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.

 

 

Season’s Greetings :-)

August 16th, 2022

You do not expect to hear people talking about the holidays just yet, but you should be thinking about them!

 

Today’s blog is by Margaret Stewart, Director of HR, and Administration at SafeSourcing Inc.

You do not expect to hear people talking about the holidays just yet, but you should be thinking about them!

While Christmas, Thanksgiving, New Year’s Day, and so many other holidays seem pretty far off, many retailers already have their holiday plans in place. This does not mean they know whose house their gathering and whether they are making a turkey or ham. This has more to do with how they plan to sell those turkeys and hams and where they might get them from. In addition, there are a number of other items associated with the holiday season, and not just those for resale.

With the holidays often comes inclement weather, so retailers and organizations must have some sort of plan for snow removal and deicing capabilities. If people cannot get to your store, they certainly cannot shop at your store. Having a plan of your season items and services is something you should be working on if not already completed.

A procurement partner like SafeSourcing can help you with your planning. While it might still be up in the air who will make pumpkin pie, we want your business to be able to get pumpkin pie and can help your procurement efforts find the right suppliers and products that fit your organization’s needs. We will collaborate with your team and can help overcome challenges you have faced and know that when the time comes, you will be ready for those season’s greetings.

For more information on what the SafeSourcing team can offer you, or on our Risk-Free trial program, please contact a SafeSourcing Customer Service representative. We have an entire team ready to assist you today.

Can Aggregation be your friend during these times?

August 12th, 2022

We have customers that do this regularly and would be glad to have you join!

 

Today’s post is from Ron Southard CEO at SafeSourcing Inc.

Aggregation is a process whereby a number of a firm’s smaller projects are combined and treated as an individual project. The main purpose of aggregation is to ensure accurate reporting and compliance with regulations regarding the permitted levels of provisional limits for a single commodity.  Aggregation is also a total made up of different parts from various sources.

The SafeSourcing Inc Collaborative Aggregation Philosophy supports the thought that disparate buying groups can on occasion work together successfully as a loosely coupled purchasing organization in order to combine volumes for better pricing consideration by suppliers. Often the specifications for these events need to be very similar in nature such as office supplies or other similar categories. Separate shipping charges and other terms and conditions may apply to each participant. Participants must support single supplier award in order to ensure the success of collaborative aggregation events to ensure that suppliers honor their prices.

We have recently seen a lot of activity in this area with dramatic savings for spends of all different sizes. Some categories have even achieved savings of over 30%. That’s 30% better than what you negotiate.We mapped these savings and are seeing some retailers with as few as 20 stores paying less than some very large customers who ran these categories during the last two years.

The markets are ripe! If you would like to learn more about how our customers and suppliers collaborate and aggregate to work together, please contact SafeSourcing.

Source:  www.fitchtraining.com

 

Sourcing in Q3 2022: Very Few Caveats Remain  

August 8th, 2022

We’ve experiences more vendor participation in RFQ events and nearly all categories are open to be sourced.   

 

Today’s post is by Dave Wenig is the Senior Vice President of Sales and Services at SafeSourcing Inc.

Last month, I shared a small list of categories as an example of where SafeSourcing’s clients have been successfully sourcing their needs using our eProcurement tools. That list was meant to represent a sample but was certainly not exhaustive.

The reality is that over the past several months, we have seen a reduction in the number of vendors who are not able to quote in our customers’ RFQ events across nearly every category we source. Here again is that list I shared last month. Below, I will share a little more about what we are experiencing.

  1. Paper Coffee Cups
  2. Waste Removal
  3. Equipment Rentals
  4. Plastic Cutlery
  5. Labels
  6. Print Fulfilment
  7. Bottled Water
  8. Retail Displays

Again, this is just a sample. We are adding to the list daily. There are only a few categories that exist that I would consider to be caveats, which is an incredible improvement over this time last year.

One of the most noticeable factors (from SafeSourcing’s point of view) is vendor participation. We are souring categories today that have dramatically improved year-over-year. An example is sausages. Last year, sausage vendors were barely able to commit to volumes, let alone quote competitively. This year, we are seeing the full roster of potential vendors lining up to earn our customers’ business.

I am not here to talk about the factors today, I am just pointing out that there are many positive signs and from SafeSourcing’s perspective, you should be seeing very few supply chain challenges at this stage. If you think you are still experiencing supply chain issues and wonder if others are seeing the same, let me know and we can trade notes on the categories.

For more information, please contact SafeSourcing.