Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Procurement Priorities

The window is open for real gains in supplier diversity

Diverse suppliers often have innovative ideas that make them stand out from the crowd. Procurement must use its influence and seek them out.

At many companies, supplier diversity programs are meeting corporate goals that require sourcing from such organizations as minority-owned, woman-owned, LGBT-owned, small, and other historically underutilized businesses. Now that procurement has the ear of the CEO, it's time to take these programs to new levels.

In the CSCMP's Supply Chain Quarterly article "Why Working with Minority Suppliers Still Matters," Joset Wright-Lacy, president of the National Minority Supplier Development Council, makes a sound case for supplier diversity. She writes that supplier diversity benefits not only participating buyers and minority-owned businesses but also the overall economy.

Procurement has been instrumental to the success of many such programs over the years. Early on, procurement leaders helped their companies comply with government regulations requiring the inclusion of diverse suppliers. Procurement's role has also included hiring supplier-diversity managers and setting up programs that tracked their company's progress toward meeting corporate diversity goals. Procurement professionals at many companies also added steps for including minority-owned businesses in processes for selecting suppliers. They worked with the suppliers to develop their capabilities; for example, by training them on processes such as completing requests for proposal (RFPs).


The results of these programs are noteworthy. New research by The Hackett Group shows 76 percent of diverse suppliers are meeting procurement's expectations for cost, delivery, quality, and service metrics, with nearly one-quarter of them consistently exceeding those requirements. But the 2016 Supplier Diversity Study also shows that diversity programs seem to be stalling.

I recently spoke to Laura Gibbons, research director with The Hackett Group's Procurement Executive Advisory Program and an author of the study. According to Gibbons, most companies have programs with only a narrow scope, such as meeting government regulations. However, as the report points out, leading companies have expanded their efforts to include developing supplier partnerships, mentoring local suppliers, collaborating with suppliers on product innovation, and sharing their experiences with other companies, says the report. When procurement leaders venture beyond the basics and work closely with diverse suppliers, both parties benefit, Gibbons said. She shared an anecdote of a cheese processor partnering with a minority-owned supplier that makes gluten-free tortillas, opening a new market and increasing sales for both."

"Diverse suppliers are being innovative to differentiate themselves," Gibbons said. "Buyers need to take advantage of that."

Innovation through diversity

CEOs today are looking to procurement for more than managing cost and delivering quality products on time. They recognize procurement has insights into markets and supplier capabilities. They want procurement to contribute ideas that will boost company profits and competitiveness. Diverse suppliers can be an untapped resource in this regard.

There are some hurdles. The Hackett Group points out that some procurement leaders don't have the necessary support from their CEOs to put more into supplier diversity programs. Others have programs they could expand to other regions of the world but have not done so. Most have not figured out how to show the return on investment of suppliers' new ideas and how they contribute to company revenue.

Based on my experience with procurement, I believe these are obstacles that can be overcome. Hackett's Gibbons suggests procurement leaders start small, perhaps by coming up with a case study that shows how working with diverse suppliers can yield new ideas for products or processes, and then sharing it with the CEO and also through social media with colleagues.

Additionally, procurement leaders should use their seat at the table to pass on diverse supplier wins to the CEO and chief financial officer. In meetings with members of cross-functional teams that design new products and with business-unit leaders, they should talk up the capabilities of diverse suppliers and the contributions they make to the company. Using their position to get support to take supplier diversity to a new level will make a difference to everyone involved, demonstrating that supplier diversity will continue to matter.

Recent

More Stories

gartner chart of survey on procurement risk

Gartner survey: supply disruption ranked as top procurement risk

A hefty 42% of procurement leaders say the biggest threat to their future success is supply disruptions—such as natural disasters and transportation issues—a Gartner survey shows.

The survey, conducted from June through July 2024 among 258 sourcing and procurement leaders, was designed to help chief procurement officers (CPOs) understand and prioritize the most significant risks that could impede procurement operations, and what actions can be taken to manage them effectively.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

Logistics services continue to “go green”

Logistics services continue to “go green”

The market for environmentally friendly logistics services is expected to grow by nearly 8% between now and 2033, reaching a value of $2.8 billion, according to research from Custom Market Insights (CMI), released earlier this year.

The “green logistics services market” encompasses environmentally sustainable logistics practices aimed at reducing carbon emissions, minimizing waste, and improving energy efficiency throughout the supply chain, according to CMI. The market involves the use of eco-friendly transportation methods—such as electric and hybrid vehicles—as well as renewable energy-powered warehouses, and advanced technologies such as the Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI) for optimizing logistics operations.

Keep ReadingShow less
An audience views a presentation given by man in a sport coat against a backdrop that says "Becoming a Real-Time Busines."

Peter Weill of MIT tells the audience at the IFS Unleashed user conference about the benefits of being a "real-time business."

Ben Ames

Real-time data flows can provide competitive advantage

Companies that integrate real-time data flows into their operations consistently outperform their competitors, said Peter Weill, the chairman of MIT’s Center for Information Systems Research (CISR), in a session Wednesday at a conference held by IFS, the Swedish enterprise resource planning (ERP) and artificial intelligence (AI) firm.

These "real-time businesses," according to Weill, use trusted, real-time data to enable people and systems to make real-time decisions. By adopting that strategy, these companies gain three major capabilities:

Keep ReadingShow less
hurricane milton rainfall forecast map florida

Supply chain networks prep for delays as Milton storms in

Hurricane Milton was just beginning to unleash its slashing wind and pouring rain on Florida’s western coast on Wednesday, but the supply chain disruptions caused by the enormous storm have already been unfolding for days.

For example, millions of residents and workers in the Tampa region have now left their homes and jobs, heeding increasingly dire evacuation warnings from state officials. They’re fleeing the estimated 10 to 20 feet of storm surge that is forecast to swamp the area, due to Hurricane Milton’s status as the strongest hurricane in the Gulf since Rita in 2005, the fifth-strongest Atlantic hurricane based on pressure, and the sixth-strongest Atlantic hurricane based on its peak winds, according to market data provider Industrial Info Resources.

Keep ReadingShow less
NRF Hackett port import stats chart

U.S. imports remain high despite dockworkers strike

The three-day dockworkers strike that shut down East and Gulf coast port operations from Maine to Texas last week appears not to have dented the nation’s flow of imported goods, according to the latest monthly report from the National Retail Federation (NRF) and Hackett Associates.

Imports at the nation’s major container ports should continue at elevated levels this month despite the strike, the groups said in their Global Port Tracker report.

Keep ReadingShow less