Читать книгу Profit from Procurement - Jose Oliveira Valentede - Страница 15
About This Book
ОглавлениеThis book is not an academic book. It represents the distilled opinions of three Procurement consultants who between them have many decades of direct and highly relevant experience. But the views and ideas expressed in this book are not facts. Indeed, you may work for a world-class company to whom many of the statements don't apply. This book is about typical situations, based on what we've found throughout our combined careers, and it's squarely aimed at the “bottom 80%,” rather than the top 20%.
The central thesis of this book is that Procurement is a major underexploited profit lever and in order to maximize its potential, a number of components must be in place, including a fit-for-purpose Procurement function that executes cross-functionally and delivers credible benefits to the business. From there, the book explores each of these components and how to make them work in practice.
The book is aimed at the entire C-Suite and is relevant not only to the CPO, but to the CFO, CEO, COO, and CIO. Why? Because (i) they all stand to gain significantly, and (ii) the CPO needs the rest of the C-Suite if he/she is to succeed. The book is also aimed at the Private Equity Operating Partner (or any other professional) looking to leverage Procurement for EBITDA improvements. We have therefore written the book in an executive style—not from a Procurement perspective, but from a cross-functional perspective. We hope that the book speaks to the entire C-Suite and helps to further educate CEOs and CFOs, in particular, about the opportunity inherent in Procurement.
This book is not an all-encompassing guide to all matters “Procurement.” Look at it as a collection of essays on key topics. All of these topics are of relevance to the CPO. The CFO and other executives might prefer to dip in and out of specific chapters, but we would argue that the Introduction and Conclusion, and the chapters on People, Sourcing Execution, Operating Model, Savings Realization, and Cross-Functional Change are highly relevant to all.
We have tried to pepper the book with relevant and interesting client anecdotes, without boring you with too much detail. Finally, the three authors are management consultants. We think this gives us a very good perspective, since we've seen all the issues discussed here with multiple clients many times over. It also means that we have a large toolbox of consulting frameworks. What we've found is that a small number of these frameworks have proven particularly powerful in transforming Procurement. So, at certain points in the book we intend to share with the reader the “secrets” of some of the more successful Procurement consulting frameworks, and how to get use from them in practice.
We're keen in this book to move beyond the hype, so our intent has been very much to be honest about the Procurement opportunity and how to capture it, and to keep the advice pragmatic and useful. Our aim was to “tell it like it is, warts and all,” the “No b-s!,” C-level guide to Procurement. We hope we've fulfilled that aim. We'd love to hear from you, but please don't write to tell us the following:
“You're such a bunch of consultants”—We know that, we can't help it! We don't think we know all the answers, but we think we have a valid external perspective; we have humbly showcased only a small number of consulting frameworks that have proved effective over the years.
“You're repetitive”—Yes, and that's a good thing! There are certain themes that run through the entire book, revisited in Chapter 14: Conclusion, that are touched on in multiple chapters…and these are the things we'd like you to remember; hence the repetition.
“The book isn't exhaustive”—No, it isn't. This is not a structured textbook. View it more as a collection of essays on some of the most important topics to take into account when transforming Procurement.
“My company is very good at Procurement. We've already done much of what you're advocating”—Great. We recognize that many companies have sophisticated Procurement functions; this book is aimed at those that don't and are looking to maximize Procurement's potential, as well as those who do but want to get some insight into what other companies are doing that they might learn from.
“You're down on Procurement”—No, we're not. We're down on bad Procurement, and Procurement whose potential is not maximized, and sometimes we're quite vocal about that. But we are champions of Procurement teams that have devoted their careers to the cause.
“All your examples feature simple indirect spend categories”—This is true. We tried to feature more complex direct materials case studies, but they're not universally understood and require more explanation, which makes it awkward to refer to them. Hence, we've relied more on indirect category examples, such as Travel, MRO, and Office Supplies. While not “strategic,” these categories are in fact quite complex and served us well in illustrating our points.
“You're too focused on savings”—The premise of this book is that Procurement is a significant and underexploited profit lever, which does put savings center-stage. Of course, Procurement has other objectives, as discussed in Chapter 8: Non-savings Priorities. But we firmly believe that it's the bottom-line contribution to profitability that puts Procurement on the map, and that is the central thesis of this book.
Of course, you can write to us anyway, but hopefully the above helps to clarify where we're coming from, and what this book is and isn't trying to be.
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In the following pages, this book will examine the Procurement Transformation journey from all angles and asks the questions that the C-level executive should be asking:
Where is the opportunity, and how big is it?
How do I capture this opportunity and its cost savings in practice?
Why do so many companies get it wrong, and how do I get it right?
How do I build the right team in Procurement, and how do I work effectively cross-functionally?
How do I ensure the savings actually flow to the bottom line?
What Procurement technologies do we and don't we need?
How do we use Procurement to minimize supply chain risk and drive non-savings agendas like Sustainability?
What can we learn from Private Equity and its approach to Procurement?
The central theme that runs right through this book is cross-functionality. Procurement's potential cannot be maximized while operating within a functional silo. That means that the entire C-Suite needs to engage with Procurement, and vice versa. Which is why this is not a book for just the CPO…Procurement is an inherently cross-functional endeavor, and success is only possible if the C-Suite works together.
We hope you enjoy the rest of the book.