Supplier Relationship Management: Importance of Building Strong Partnership

The Rise of Procurement

Across industries and globally, procurement functions are doing well. Companies have restructured themselves to better run their procurement related activities. There are appointments such as chief procurement officer to lead their product market strategy and product manufacturing. Functional silos have also been crumbled with cross-functional procurement teams working on key initiatives being a common sight nowadays. Executives have also equipped themselves with engineering and marketing jargons to converse with suppliers. With all these in place, it is no surprise that the procurement process has become largely standardized as companies figure out the best practices. So, since everything looks so rosy, what is the problem with procurement then?

The Unseen Problem

Overoptimization of procurement has shifted the focus away from human relationships and made it overly categorized. Rather than working with suppliers to achieve mutual benefit, businesses approach suppliers with an objective checklist mindset instead. For example, teams working on the next up and coming product market are focusing on categories and not prioritizing supplier interests. Another example is teams measuring procurement performance focused on savings by category and products rather than on the savings or values granted by suppliers. Additionally, the job functions expected of talents recruited into procurement are more focused on better understanding products and categories and not managing suppliers’ relationships. It is unfortunate that suppliers are seen as faceless entity rather than partners in the procurement process.

Suppliers now faces issues on their side, such as receiving opposing information across business units when working with them, rendering them unable to act. They are also prone to last minute changes from companies, leaving them no time to respond. We can see that the lack of alignment within business functions, coupled with no accountability, is damaging to the supplier. It might even mean job cuts or plants closure on the supplier end as they lose out on business. On the other hand, companies are also not free from repercussions. A supplier acting in bad faith can take advantage of the internal misalignment and obfuscate contractual terms and prices.

A Different Perspective

This is where Supplier Relationship Management (SRM) comes into play. While category management focuses on the cost of product or service, SRM is about increasing efficiency when collaborating with supplier and reap benefits from it. It recognizes that both parties have their own goals and interest to meet. Companies can develop their relationships by starting to ask questions like, what do we want from this supplier at a company level, how do we want to structure the relationship with this supplier, and how do we ensure we are aligned internally when dealing with this supplier? These crucial questions are beneficial to all organizations. It presents them with new opportunities and allows them to tap into new working dimension presented with supplier relationship management. 

About Weaver

Founded in 2001, Weaver is a leading digital enterprise software provider headquartered in Shanghai, with regional presence and service networks across Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia. Weaver specializes in a low-code collaborative management platform with a diverse portfolio, serving over 70,000 organizations and enterprises across 87 industries. 

Get in touch with us:

Sales inquiry: sales@weaver.com.sg

Support: support@weaver.com.sg

Contact: +65 8857 5530

Share via

Category

Tags

Recommended for you

Kickstart digital transformation journey with Weaver

Connecting People, Business Process and Data using digital services.

Welcome to Weaver.

Free demo on us. Get started today.

Free demo on us.
Get started today.

Welcome to Weaver.

Free demo on us. Get started today.

Free demo on us.
Get started today.