Managing your supplier expenses is critical to your profitability. People can tend to focus their efforts on the “visible” part of an iceberg and neglect to see the dangers of the “invisible”, in this case the size of the iceberg under the water line. What does the “iceberg principal” have to do with the management of supplier expenses?
In my experience, everything.
Based on my experience, many businesses follow a decentralized purchasing approach – they don’t have a Purchasing or Spend Management Team or process in place to control the addition, deletion of suppliers.
Additionally, businesses don’t typically quote suppliers and they don’t limit the suppliers used across the enterprise in a given expense category.
In fact, many Managers are given the freedom to use whomever they want as suppliers – which exacerbates the problem altogether, adding cost, complexity and inefficiency.
Most businesses focus on the price they pay for an item of service (visible part of the iceberg above the water line), but neglect the larger part of expenses having to do with competitive business terms, processes and the amount of suppliers used in the process.
All this adds up to costs that are not visible (below the water line) that can be quite extensive and very expensive to an organization.
Why do businesses end up with broad supplier bases and incur excess costs? There are a few common reasons why this happens.
One of the most efficient ways to manage supplier expenses whether you are centralized or decentralized is to create a Preferred Supplier Program for your organization. Many organizations designate Preferred Suppliers in a particular expense category. For instance, a dealership group might quote and negotiate a great program with ABC Office Supply company for all office supply needs. Pricing is negotiated, locked, training is accomplished and communications are sent to employees advising them to use ABC Office Supply as the designated office supply company.
In most quarters, the selection of ABC is considered the “Preferred Supplier” of the organization and is the supplier that should be utilized for all purchases maximizing your leverage and reducing the internal inefficiencies that come with multiple suppliers in a category.
Preferred Supplier programs will reduce costs, reduce complexities and increase the efficiencies of your business by providing the following benefits:
Target a 25% Reduction in Your Supplier Base – Savings of $292K annually
Current Suppliers | New
Suppliers |
Supplier Reduction | Old Supplier Management Costs | New Management Costs | Annual Savings |
600 | 450 | 150 | $1.170M | $877,500 | $292,500 |
There is more to reducing costs than getting your supplier to provide price breaks. While those price breaks are important, your supplier strategy can yield hundreds of thousands, even millions of dollars in efficiencies each year if structured correctly. After all, for those groups that are growing, achieving economies of scale are one of your primary objectives, correct? Well then, let’s get some of those economies in your supplier base and internal efficiencies by following the next steps outlined below.
Leadership and management can be hard work. This Preferred Supplier program is not difficult to implement but does take some time. The alternative to this process is to have an organization that perpetuates poor supplier strategy resulting in significant wasted time and dollars for years to come.
2021 might be the time to make these improvements happen.
If you are planning to undertake this effort to get your spend management function set up and running correctly, you do not have to go it alone.
If you are planning to undertake this effort to get your spend management function set up and running correctly, you do not have to go it alone. StrategicSource’s Profit Improvement program help you identify areas for improvement long-term.