By: Sampathkumar Sudarshan & Carlos Niezen
With the downturn affecting virtually every industry,
companies are looking for cash. There's no easier way to generate quick cash
without salary cuts, bonus reductions or painful layoffs than to find cost
savings in purchasing.
The purchasing of goods and services is one of the largest,
if not the largest cost category-for most businesses it represents a
significant cost, in some cases exceeding 50% of their total expenses. And the
savings can be substantial. In our experience, companies taking a systematic
approach can save 5-to-30% of their total costs from purchasing.
The trouble is, in downturns most companies feel caught in a
bind. Do they devote their efforts to generating fast money by renegotiating
with suppliers? Or do they invest to build the broad purchasing capabilities
that will help them come out of the downturn with a stronger competitive
position? Too often companies think they need to choose between the two.
Acting under pressure they often take reflexive actions that
end up damaging them in the middle to long term. They fail to align their
purchasing strategy with their corporate strategy. They grab whatever costs
they can for short-term gain (sometimes even driving promising suppliers to the
brink of bankruptcy), when slightly more effort would deliver better-and
lasting-results.
We've identified an approach that allows companies to build
supply management capabilities while also addressing their short-term needs for
cash and profits. This stratagem has three key steps.
Sizing the opportunity:
Sizing-and understanding-the opportunity for purchasing
gains is the first step in strategic purchasing. How do companies objectively
determine how much of their cost saving targets can be delivered by purchasing-and,
crucially, link it to strategy?
A company we'll call Food Co. wanted to use its scale to
gain competitive advantage in purchasing. As a broad effort to set cost saving
targets, Food Co. conducted an "experience curve" analysis aimed at
understanding how much its supplier of plastic bottles should be charging,
based on the fact that the supplier's costs to produce each bottle should have
declined during its years of experience. The exercise was spurred by the fact
that the supplier wanted to increase its prices.
For its part, Food Co. also conducted a make vs. buy
analysis to determine if it would be more cost effective to produce the bottles
itself, and also used broad benchmarking-looking beyond its company and
industry for benchmarks-to set savings targets. Thus, Food Co. was not only
able to strategically set accurate saving targets for purchasing in a critical
category but also turn around supplier negotiations in its favour. Faced with
quantitative evidence, its supplier of plastic bottles decided to decrease its
prices rather than increase them- and Food Co. saved an annual $7 million.
Finding Quick Hits:
When it comes to generating quick cash, strategic supply
leaders typically look inward for places to cut demand. Companies have the most
options for cuts in spending for indirect supplies everything from travel to
printers. They can quickly impose tighter expense policies and approvals. In
tough times, just enforcing compliance can make the cash register ring.
They can put in place stricter approvals for staffing
services-and analyse the top 20% in terms of cost with the aim of driving those
contracts down between 10 to 20%. They can save on facilities costs by re-negotiating
leases with less than three years remaining, trading lower rates for lease extensions.
For owned buildings they can apply for property tax reassessments. They can cut
back on office support such as janitorial and other facilities staff or re-bid
with local contractors. One US bank saved $3.1 million within a year through
such means.