A mature procurement function, highlighting supplier relationship management, can provide value and cost effective results.
By relying on suppliers more than ever before, forward-thinking organizations can no longer afford to consider the procurement function as a zero-sum game, where one side’s win is the other’s loss.
Too much is at stake. Companies spend an average 15-27 percent, of total revenues, on external suppliers. But a full quarter or third of the negotiated value is lost over the term of the deal.
With large, complex deals hanging in balance, organizations essentially have two options: they can continue attempting to wring the last dollar of cost savings from contract negotiations, or they can invest in creating value through collaboration with the supplier by driving innovation over the course of the contract.
While the first option is risky for categories that have already gone through frequent sourcing exercises, the opportunity to generate value through the second option remains wide open.
Creating joint value for the buying organization and its suppliers will require the development of a supplier relationship-centric framework that can drive performance to new levels while fostering innovation and mitigating risk.
KPMG’s experience in helping organizations design and implement supplier relationship management programs shows that six key attributes distinguish leading-practice SRM programs from mediocre ones:
Client challenge
Senior executives at CNA Insurance, a leading provider of commercial insurance, knew they faced significant challenges in the procurement function. Frequent changes in the strategic supplier ecosystem, decentralized operations for managing suppliers, and ineffective responses to regulatory pressures had led to significant value leakage—in excess of $9 million per year. The lack of a supplier-centric model would continue to penalize company profits and deny procurement leaders a seat at the table unless they revitalized their supplier relationship management (SRM) and third-party relationship management (TPRM) programs. A thorough assessment could address pressing issues and also point the way to increased bottom- and top-line impact.
Benefits to client
CNA expects its new SRM and TPRM programs to improve relationships with strategic suppliers, reduce risk, improve governance, and increase regulatory compliance. Aligning the new programs to larger business goals also improved executive support. By becoming the “customer of choice,” the company expects to achieve incremental value of $7 million to $12 million over 24 months.
KPMG response
Leveraging KPMG’s in-depth understanding of the procurement function and deep experience in the insurance sector, we used our target operating model methodology to assess CNA’s current state, evaluate opportunities, and develop a roadmap for a successful 24-month transformation journey.
Interviews with more than 50 internal and external stakeholders and reviews of past actions helped us identify opportunities and make recommendations based on the six layers of the KPMG target operating model: service delivery, organization and people, business processes, governance and controls, reporting, and technology. The resulting roadmap was socialized extensively within the procurement function and with business partners to gain alignment and gauge the need for change, sponsorship, and investment.
Change management programs were implemented at every step of the transformation to help the program gain support from the larger organization, which would be part of the new supplier-centric implementation or see its results.
In addition, a risk management tool was integrated to address regulatory compliance issues.
KPMG insights
The new frontier of value – Supplier relationship management
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