Managing Indirect Spend. Joe PayneЧитать онлайн книгу.
of the category beyond the data derived from spend analysis—learning the background or history of the relationship, finding out what the supplier provides in terms of service, determining critical aspects of the relationship, and understanding what contractual obligations exist. In some cases, you may find that this step serves as a mere validation of what you previously learned from the end users you interviewed. Often, though, suppliers provide insight into the relationship that end users are not aware of or may not have articulated properly. Sometimes, suppliers can shed light on market conditions, new processes and technologies, and additional products and services that could be advantageous to your organization.
Overall, the supplier interview should be viewed as a collaborative brainstorming session. You should not invite the supplier in only to formally request information about the relationship. Instead, use the meeting as a platform to find out the supplier's pain points and motivation. What can your organization do better to help the supplier? What does a perfect customer look like? What additional business would the supplier like that it does not currently have? As we discuss in Chapter 6, understanding supplier motivation and leverage points is a vital part of the sourcing and negotiation process. The supplier interview is the optimal time to get this information and start the process on the right foot.
As part of the agenda for the meeting, ask the supplier to bring sales reports that you can review, along with any relevant paperwork that you may not have, such as contracts or pricing agreements. In addition, you will find it useful to request that the supervisor of the primary sales representative attend the meeting, which helps you better get to know who to go to if you are not getting what you need from your representative. This also gives you a good indication of how your primary representative works within the company and how aware the supervisor is of your account. If the supervisor is well up to speed, your account is probably important to your supplier, and your primary rep is doing a good job communicating your needs within their organization.
As described earlier in this section, you will want to use this meeting to uncover more details about what the supplier does for your organization and, if possible, learn more about the marketplace. Consider asking questions like the following during the supplier interview:
How long have you been a supplier for our organization?
In terms of account size, is our organization a top‐5 customer, top‐10, or other?
How would you rate us as a customer?
What could we do better as a customer?
What issues (quality, service, delivery, payment, other) have you encountered while working with our company? How have issues been resolved?
What services do you provide our company that might not be in the contract or on an invoice?
How would you differentiate yourself from your competitors?
Why do your competitors win business that you do not?
What measures do you take to ensure the quality of your product or service?
What is the process by which quality problems are resolved and corrected?
Do you provide any indemnification or insurance for your customers to protect against risk of loss due to product failure?
What are your standard payment terms? What are the terms for our organization?
Does our company take advantage of discounted terms?
How do you receive payment (check, ACH, etc.)? Do you have a preference?
What market changes and innovations are on the horizon for your industry? How does your organization intend to address those changes?
What are your goals and expectations for our account?
Of course, depending on the market and the supplier relationship, other questions should be considered, including questions related to price changes, freight terms (if applicable), and services, but these questions are a good start.
After going through the interview questions, review the reports that the supplier brought to the meeting. Do they include line‐item detail? If not, make the line‐item usage detail request an action item to be completed once the meeting is over. As we discussed earlier in the chapter, follow up the request by providing the supplier with a template indicating the type and detail of data you need and provide a deadline for completion of the request.
The last agenda item for a supplier interview is to inform the supplier of the process in which you are about to engage. You should be open and honest about the initiative, what's driving it, and your objectives. Let the supplier know that this is a company‐wide initiative and they are not being singled out. Keep in mind that, at this point, you do not know much about the competitiveness of the supplier's current pricing—you may already have a very good deal. Let the representative know that that just because your company is looking to reduce costs, this does not mean that there will be a bid. Also, make sure to communicate that you recognize they need to make money in order to stay in business, so your goal is to get to a market‐competitive price point that helps with your cost reduction objectives and helps them retain the business. Finally, ensure the supplier understands that all the critical aspects of the relationship and the supplier's service offering will be considered as you engage in this process.
ANALYZING CONTRACTS AND PRICING AGREEMENTS
By the time the end‐user and supplier interviews are complete, you will have collected all contracts or pricing agreements that are in place with your suppliers. At this stage in the process, your goal is not to rewrite agreements but to identify current contractual commitments and requirements. You need to analyze several key components to contracts and pricing agreements, including general terms, conditions and pricing information, service‐level information, and liability. This section of the book reviews the types of contractual commitments. Chapter 7 covers what types of commitments you need to consider when entering into a new agreement.
General Terms
General terms include items like contract start and expiration dates, renewal clauses, and termination clauses. It is important to understand contract start and end dates and termination clauses for several reasons. First, if a contract was executed recently and does not have a termination clause beyond default (essentially allowing the customer or supplier to cancel the agreement if terms of the agreement are not met), then, depending on your obligations under the contract, you may not be able to change suppliers until the contract end date.
Renewal clauses (also known as auto‐renew or evergreen clauses) are also important, because they may require that a termination notice be given a certain amount of time prior to contract expiration. For instance, a contract may expire in February of next year. However, the renewal clause states that the contract automatically renews for a one‐year term unless written notice is provided no less than 60 days before agreement expiration. This means you need to give notice that you do not intend on renewing the contract by November of this year.
Pricing Information
Of course, pricing information is another important aspect of a contract or pricing agreement. While unit pricing is the most obvious pricing factor, contracts often include many other types of pricing:
Mechanisms for changing price. These could include an index‐based formulation linked directly to supplier raw material costs or a stipulation that prices will not exceed a certain percentage over a certain period of time.
Notification for price changes and guidelines for accepting or rejecting changes
Miscellaneous charges, such as freight or other servicing fees
Payment terms, including