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Tackling Asia’s procurement challenge

Tackling Asia’s procurement challenge

Procurement represents the lion’s share—as much as 80 percent—of overall costs in some industries, and companies like Walmart and Apple have demonstrated that procurement leaders are cost leaders in their industries, with a clear edge over rivals.

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Tackling Asia’s procurement challenge
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This article originally appeared in The Malaysian Insider

Procurement represents the lion’s share—as much as 80%—of overall costs in some industries, and companies like Walmart and Apple have demonstrated that procurement leaders are cost leaders in their industries, with a clear edge over rivals.

Nowhere is the pressure to improve procurement as intense as in Asia Pacific (APAC), both for domestic and multinational companies (MNCs) that rely on the region as an important source of goods and services.

Companies in developing countries like China wrestle with operations that have bloated during high-growth years.

Those in developed countries like Australia struggle to shore up margins as top-line growth slows. Firms in all parts of the region deal with rising and volatile input costs.

When we recently interviewed 60 business heads and chief procurement officers throughout Asia Pacific, 91% agreed that volatility continues to dominate their agenda.

Leadership teams have dutifully set aggressive targets for reducing input costs—and usually in a short period of time. Despite their best intentions, however, many executives tell us they are simply ill-prepared to meet their goals. They readily admit that their companies rely on procurement capabilities that are no better than their competitors—and sometimes worse.

Still, our interviews helped us identify those procurement organisations that stand out. A 5% cost performance gap and contribution to revenues is what sets apart good from great procurement organisations in leading companies across the region when compared with their industry peers.

The majority of executives we interviewed described procurement operations that lag global best practices. That spells trouble for companies headquartered in APAC as well as global MNCs that source extensively from the region.

Our study found that procurement teams in Asia Pacific often lack organisational support and prominence, tend to focus on short-term activities, rely on inadequate demand management processes and struggle with underdeveloped supply bases.

For example, more than half of the CEOs interviewed feel their supply base is underdeveloped.

Moreover, they lack systematic supplier management processes, reliable data systems and strong procurement talent. In fact, only 40% are satisfied with their procurement talent.

Fortunately, they can learn from the best. Even companies that are woefully behind can catch up by adopting the practices of what we refer to as “4th-Generation” procurement—using the procurement function as a way to add value to the business year after year, boosting the bottom line by keeping costs from mounting.

With a dedicated effort and a continuous improvement culture supported by the complementing capabilities, we have seen companies repeatedly achieve 3 to 4% savings year over year, following initial savings of 8 to 12%.

What does 4th-Generation procurement look like? Based on our work with clients and our study of procurement capabilities in Asia Pacific, we’ve identified the criteria that raise companies above their rivals.

Leaders tackle procurement from an organisational standpoint, choosing a mandate and structure to maximise procurement gains. LG Electronics moved from managing its procurement according to product line to managing it according to stages in the manufacturing process.

Hence, it could buy the same part for washing machines and refrigerators. It also reorganised reporting structures—now all procurement team members report to a head of procurement—and gave procurement a seat at the table in top executive consensus meetings.

The savings mounted. Procurement’s impact on the bottom line is estimated at US$30 billion (RM100 billion) from 2008 to 2012, and it remains a key factor in LG’s continued success.

Winners focus on the critical processes they need to get right: Category management, vendor development and the quality of information. For example, they rigorously evaluate suppliers and contracts, always conducting a total-cost-of-ownership analysis.

UK-based mining company Rio Tinto, with major operations throughout Asia Pacific, works with internal customers to identify short- and long-term needs and develops expert knowledge of supply markets, vendors and value levers.

To minimise costs and maximise value, it implements regional category strategies, taking a total-cost-of-ownership approach.

Then it systematically manages its suppliers through predefined key performance indicators (KPIs) and common objectives. Along with other initiatives, Rio Tinto’s procurement operation will contribute to the company’s expected cash cost savings of more than $5 billion by the end of 2014.

4th-Generation procurement companies rely on customised, dynamic dashboards that provide integrated and transparent data for both direct and indirect spending, highlighting performance gaps. With seamless access to centralised global information, Ford Motor Company’s procurement managers quickly see and adapt best practices.

They may note, for example, that a global supplier of headlamps has a production facility in Asia that faces quality challenges at a higher rate than does its facility in Europe.

With this comparison in hand, the company can actively work with the supplier to improve its record and meet global standards for all its facilities.

To boost the effectiveness of the profit and loss (P&L), companies with 4th-Generation capabilities establish pull-based demand management with enforced compliance and formalised budgeting for all categories.

At one leading retailer, an advanced category management toolkit allows the company to see the direct effect of its sourcing decisions on the bottom line—a first step in alerting it to the need to make adjustments.

Leaders make a serious point of investing in talent. They establish procurement as a grooming ground for leadership and manage performance through well-defined KPIs and incentives. The right mind-set: whenever a key person in procurement is being recruited at Royal Philips Electronics, stakeholders throughout the company are consulted in the process.

Finally, to stay on task and sustain results, forward-thinking firms establish risk teams that track and manage all transactional and strategic risks.

For example, to make its savings stick, Dow Chemical implemented a system of feedback loops.

Supply managers routinely sit down with business unit managers to review supply management performance and jointly determine ways to improve. – The Jakarta Post, February 5, 2014.

Francesco Cigala is a Bain & Company partner based in Kuala Lumpur and Gerry Mattios is a Bain & Company principal based in Beijing.

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