In the age of Procurement 4.0, we are bombed with all the news about technology changing our daily work, new concepts in management models, volatile economy, globalization and increasing number of suppliers.
In the age of Procurement 4.0, we are bombed with all the news about technology changing our daily work, new concepts in management models, volatile economy, globalization and increasing number of suppliers.
However, every sourcing specialist must bear in mind the fundamental rules for every sourcer out there.
Detailed and clear specifications are an essential requirement. Stay as specific as possible in your product description, be sure to send up-to-date drawings and samples to potential suppliers, communicate annual and lot sizes requirements. Make sure a supplier fully understands your quality expectations and how performance will be assessed. Provide all specifications in English and with international standards, otherwise a Chinese supplier will have difficulties in understanding e.g. your German drawings or DIN standards.
Prepare a supplier profile using a questionnaire (e.g. RFI) including company size, financial figures, references, technology, certification, etc. are an essential requirement. Pre-evaluate a potential supplier abilities to become a long-term partner with your business. Be aware that the RFI is not a full supplier assessment – you only want to know if the identified company will be able to make a competitive proposal.
Do not always rely on certificates you will find on the supplier website, in some countries validity and the value of different certificates might be questionable. At the same time, do not exclude a supplier without a certificate in the initial stage of your sourcing process, instead conduct on-site audit with your internal team. Supplier audits is an essential tool for identifying and preventing quality problems in a supplier’s products or processes before the problems spread. Importance of supplier visit is very often justified just after you realize that facility pictures you have seen on the supplier’s website are much different from what you have seen on-site.
Do not let the price to be the selection criterion number one when choosing the right supplier. Identifying the total cost of ownership requires looking at the entire sourcing process, it is necessary to
assess the full impact of transport costs, warehousing, custom clearance, additional audit costs, samples, trainings, etc.
When working with supplier from different countries take into account cultural differences and adapt your operational style to match those if your foreign partners. Different cultures conduct business and negotiations in different ways. Using assertive language may be interpreted as strong and confident in your country, however a foreign supplier may consider it as aggressive and rude. A common mistake is e.g. ignoring cultural differences in holidays schedules – do not be surprised when planning a supplier visit or a project launch in August and your potential supplier from South Europe has no staff available.