The Power of Benchmarking in Procurement: Driving Success and Strategic Planning (Part Two)
Caldwell Hart, CPSM CPSD
Transformational Senior Global Supply Chain and Procurement Leader
Key Takeaways
Introduction
A divisional president from a multinational aerospace and defense company during a business review in 2001 asked how his organization’s procurement team compared on cost management best practices. ?
His team answered, “We’re best in class!” ?
He responded, “Compared to whom?” ?
“Compared to the other divisions within the corporation,” his team said.
“Did you benchmark any companies outside of ours within aerospace or from other industries?” the president asked.
“No.”
His next response defines why benchmarking is such a powerful tool: “Being the best of the worst is nothing to be proud of. Since we only benchmarked against ourselves, we really have no idea how good or bad we really are. Go benchmark a range of other corporations and then we will have a conversation on how good or bad we really are.” ?
Over the next two years, this company delivered superior results and became a benchmark target for other corporations in the industry as it pioneered new techniques for procurement and defined what best in class looked like.
As the above example illustrates, benchmarking in procurement involves comparing a company’s performance to other organizations across industry. It provides a snapshot of where a company stands relative to competitors and offers insights into where improvements may be required. ?
In our previous post, we discussed the importance of combining lagging and leading indicators to optimize procurement team strategy. While such KPIs are useful tools, they provide a primarily internal view of the performance of your supply chain. Benchmarking, meanwhile, provides a valuable outside comparison to gauge where your company’s people, processes, enabling technology, and performance are in relation to other organizations. Taken together with internal KPIs, benchmarking can provide a complete picture of both past performance and future potential.
In this post, we will look at the importance of benchmarking for procurement as well as provide sources and best practices for benchmarking data.
Benchmarking in Procurement
In procurement, benchmarking can be used to compare supplier performance, procurement costs, lead-times, quality, on-time, productivity, safety, compliance, and other key metrics against external standards. It helps organizations understand their strengths, weaknesses, threats, and opportunities, all key elements of a traditional SWOT analysis. Benchmarking also forms an informational foundation for other strategy tools like Porter’s Five Forces, which shows the relative leverage in the marketplace that a buyer or seller may have.
Procurement professionals benefit from benchmarking as it highlights where they stand in the marketplace and offers a roadmap for improvement. It helps ensure competitiveness and reduces the risk of falling behind. Often, companies which are not direct competitors are willing to create benchmark networks to learn and share best practices. Together, the information exchange helps the participating organizations gain valuable insights, lessons learned, and best practices. This process allows for improvements and validation of strategies. ?
Benefits of benchmarking include:
Sources and Best Practices of Benchmarking Data
Sources of Benchmarking Data
Organizations can obtain benchmarking data from multiple sources, including platforms like Avetta, independent research firms like McKinsey, and industry-specific reports like those from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM). Many of today’s SaaS solutions in supply chain management (SCM) and procurement also have analytics capabilities that offer benchmarking comparisons of suppliers, categories, and industries. This information is valuable when the team analyzes it deeply, looking at past performance (scorecards) and future needs to take action on strategy around people, process, and technology to drive outcomes.
Best Practices for Benchmarking in Procurement
Conclusion
Benchmarking is an essential tool for procurement professionals. It enables organizations to stay competitive, understand their place in the market, and strategically plan for future growth and risk mitigation. By setting goals, using a wide variety of sources, and leveraging modern tech platforms, procurement teams can lay the foundations for a data-informed continual improvement process that can greatly increase the efficiency and maturity of your procurement organization. ?
In our next post, we’ll discuss just what such a continual improvement process should look like.
Join Avetta at SAP Spend Connect in Las Vegas from October 14-18 to learn more about how benchmarking can drive procurement success. We will be presenting two sessions on Leveraging Insights to Design Sustainable and Resilient Supply Chains and Driving Performance: Effective Strategies to Navigate Supply Chain Risk. Speak with our experts and discover how Avetta’s tools can help your organization take advantage of industry-leading data and insights.
Avetta is a SaaS software company providing supply chain risk management solutions. Avetta’s platform is trusted by over 130,000 suppliers in over 120 countries. Visit Avetta.com to learn more about our supplier prequalification solutions.
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1 个月Craig Bartlett thought you might find this interesting after last week's chat