To clarify, in business there are two types of supply chain
management; the centralised approach and the decentralised approach.
Let’s first define each so you can understand the risks
involved better.
The first is the centralised approach to sourcing and it’s
the best way to manage SCM.
A centralised and often strategic approach to sourcing
business supplies and services requires your head office to have a procurement
team in process. If you don’t have the capital to invest in developing your own
in-house team of sourcing experts, outsourcing to specialist providers would be
the next best thing and will still help you cut costs.
The second approach that many smaller sized businesses take
to SCM is the decentralised approach. With this, when you’re only operating
from one location, you may be able to keep on top of things but the risk is still
there that certain aspects could be overlooked leading to higher operational
costs than you need be paying.
The decentralised approach to sourcing anything transfers
power throughout the company, meaning that many staff are able to order
whatever supplies they feel they need and worse still is when there is no
pre-approval required before ordering. That will lead to increased invoices,
leaving upper management with little influence over expenses control.
Beyond that, here are…
The Top 5 Risks of Operating with a Decentralised Sourcing Process
1.
The risk of having too many suppliers
Even stationery can become cumbersome if it’s not managed.
Can you imagine, or worse if you’re experiencing this already, getting your
stationery from one supplier, your secretary ordering print paper and ink
cartridges from another, letterheads from another supplier and business cards
from somewhere else?
The costs will quickly spiral but the worst risk you’re
putting your business through is the one of quality management. Everything you
order needs to be consistent with your brand and that includes your printer
ink, company letterheads and business cards, and all your stationery.
With too many suppliers in your business, you’ll have
increased invoicing to deal with, which can lead to some being missed resulting
in late payment fees and you’ll struggle to manage the quality of supplies
across your firm.
Stay in control of quality and expenses by minimising your
supplier base for each product or service category your business requires.
2.
Surplus expenses
The less “expenses” your company has, the better you’ll be
able to manage your accounts. This isn’t only about managing your finances,
because it’s more about the paperwork that comes along with increased
operational expenses. The more invoices you have, the more payments you need to
make or cheques need issued. It can become a time intensive process just
dealing with the paperwork involved in having too many suppliers, creating far
too many invoices for your accounting/finance team or your accountant to deal
with in a timely manner.
Even if you’re using cloud accounting to manage your
financial records, the input and reconciliation of each invoice will quickly
become time intensive.
3.
Brand quality sacrificed
Your suppliers are business partners and need to be treated
as such. A lack of control over your suppliers and you’ll be doing wrong by
your customers.
The best approach to strategic sourcing in supply chain
management for any business is to remember these three rules…
It’s about…
1.
Process
2.
Personality
3.
Repertoire
The first is to get a
process in place for strategic sourcing, letting you manage the process
efficiently.
The second rule is to have a representative work closely with
partners, which often means personality matches ensuring they can work together
professionally for amicable business objectives. The third is repertoire
between your sourcing expert and a supplier representative ensuring long-term
partnership resulting in best practices for both businesses.
When you have all three, you have a process in place that
can stand the test of time and could even give your firm a competitive
advantage. That’s the entire reason for taking a strategic approach to sourcing
business supplies and services.
4.
Too much data
Having too much data from a broad range of suppliers will
make it difficult for your team to scour through it to make the best decisions
moving forward.
By centralising your supplier base, your team will be better
equipped to scrutinise the B2B contracts in place, and then work with suppliers
to negotiate better terms, pricing or both; something that’s going to be too
difficult when you lack the attention of one supplier.
Today’s supply chain management is not always about buying
bulk for discount. It’s more about buying into value. The supplier to provide
your business with the most value is the one that should win the contract.
Suppliers know this and will work closely with you to ensure you are receiving
value. Some will even go as far as investing to ensure their business is in the
best position possible to streamline the supplies to your company and pretty
much future-proof the contracts against potential competitors.
5.
The biggest risk factor is to your optimised spending
For purchasing to be efficient across a business, it
requires spending to be optimised. You cannot do that without having a
centralised purchasing process in place. There needs to be formal supply chain
management policies in place, approval processes that all staff understand so
they can divert their needs to the appropriate named contact in your business;
even if that’s a named contact acting as a liaison officer between the firm and
an outsourcing procurement specialist.
Only when you have standardised approval processes for
purchasing in place, and professionals to oversee the procurement process of
all supplies across the entire company will you be able to mitigate the risks
of operating with a decentralised procurement process.
Image courtesy of coaconsult.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment