The New Normal

The New Normal

When Winston Churchill announced the defeat of Rommel in Africa in 1942, he declared: “This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.”

This echo from history calls for us to move to the end of the beginning, and build the new normal.

As I wrote about last week, the driving characteristic of the COVID-19 pandemic is that this is not a temporary response scenario - this is a persistent reality until vaccines are widespread, and that will reshape our organizations in terms of where we do the work and how we do the work. 

As we mark the 100th day since the first case of coronavirus in the US on January 19th, it is an appropriate time to acknowledge that our new responsibilities are not temporary and to reconsider and rebuild our organizations around this reality.

Examples of factors that will cause this to be a profession changing event:

  • Reliance on Paper and Ink has been Exposed: Our tried and true processes of routing manila folders for blue ink signatures have been seen as “good enough,” and in many organizations, automation of these processes was seen as a deferrable luxury. Now that our widely distributed teams need digital processes and supply needs are so urgent, many anachronisms from the world of paper are being left behind temporarily, and likely permanently.
  • Supply Chain Management Will Be a Persistent Expectation: True supply chain management skills will be an ongoing expectation for government purchasing organizations. The heightened demand for medical supplies will put lasting pressure on our systems, and economic fluctuations will cause new supply challenges in areas ranging from food to fuel. Logistics, spend analysis, agile reporting and advanced sourcing techniques will become the norm.
  • Priorities Must be Recalibrated Quickly: Simply taking our best team members and having them staff the Emergency Operations Centers may be effective for short term events. But over a long and sustained period, it will mean the primary duties they are forced to defer risk becoming the next crisis. How we resource across all our responsibilities will soon be an urgent reality.
  • Budgets Will Become the Next Line of Defense: Likely budget shortfalls in state and local governments that will flow from economic interruptions will cause increasing pressure to drive savings and value into all parts of the public contract portfolio, increasing the strategic role of Procurement Officers.

There is a growing awareness that our new normal will require us to take these new factors in stride, and begin pulling the day to day operations back into focus, while our teams are still working from their kitchen tables.

There is no path back to where we were. If we can’t go back, then the only way out is through.

Public Procurement at an operational level needs to be rethought and rebuilt around three key characteristics:

  1. Capacity: The fundamental ability to do work. Are we doing the right type of work? Are we doing unproductive work that should be discontinued or automated? Does our staff have the required skills for the changing demand? Do we have the right resources in the right roles?
  2. Agility: The ability to drive velocity into our work. Are we able to efficiently change our policies and processes to reduce internal bottlenecks? Can we do things in new ways for better results? Can we apply creativity to solve new problems? Can we change our delegation of authority to focus first on our highest priorities?
  3. Resiliency: The ability to overcome new obstacles and continue to deliver. Are our teams able to function remotely? Can we change to eliminate single points of failure? How do we build redundancy into our supply networks? Can we increase regional coordination to improve outcomes for ourselves and our peers?

In an effort to develop organizational maturity through the challenges we face, it’s important to capture the barriers we have overcome, what innovations we have created, what’s on the horizon across all of our work, and what we have learned about ourselves.  

In the last week, Civic Initiatives has begun conducting new normal design exercises with several of our state, local, and higher education clients based on these characteristics. We are using an innovative online platform to accelerate reorienting around strategic priorities, and creating an action framework that replaces our outdated strategic plans. I’ll report back on the outcomes in future articles with some of our CPO partners.

Please reach out if you are interested in learning more, or join in on the conversation below.   

 

Stephen B. Gordon, Ph.D., FNIGP, CPPO

Passionately Committed to Advancing the Contribution of Public Procurement and Contract Management to Government Results

4 年

Hi Dustin, your piece is excellent. One additional consideration, related to capacity and information and idea sharing, is the value that could be added by a much a higher level of collaboration (including in the appropriate circumstances, consolidation) among public buying entities. A second additional consideration relates to the importance of what I refer to as “needed personal traits” in the people who will help state and local procurement get to where it needs to be now and to continuously improve it. One of the key needed personal traits, IMO, is a hunger for leaning and applying new knowledge, skills, and methods. I’ll stop here for now. Thanks again for sharing your excellent thoughts.?

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John Miri

Power, Utilities, and Infrastructure Executive | Founder of the Electric Grid Cybersecurity Alliance

4 年

Great analysis, Dustin. The role of a high-performance supply chain in organizational resilience has never been more clear. That is an enduring lesson of this crisis, and something that we can't forget even when this crisis is behind us. Nice work.

Tammy Rimes, MPA

Inspirational Keynote Speaker - Procurement Consultant & Executive Director of National Cooperative Procurement Partners

4 年

Many great points - it is a changing working environment, with hopes that operational departments now have a better appreciation for procurement professionals and their areas of expertise. Many "tried and true" processes will be taking a turn as well (i.e. wet signature vs. digital signature; in-person vs. virtual mtgs) - lots of paradigm shifts!

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Great piece Dustin. The new normal is appearing to look like a different government at massive scale. Looking forward to seeing what the future of procurement has in store for us and appreciate your post here! Take care.

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Kristin Russell

President & C-Level Exec | Board Director | Multi-Billion P&L | Global Tech Leader | Sustained Growth, Revenue & EBITDA | B2B, SaaS, Tech, Product | Digital Transformation | Services & Operations

4 年

Great post, Dustin! Really important for us to learn from this experience and realize that throughout history, periods of global crisis didn't necessarily bring about new trends, but rather accelerate ones that were already existent.

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