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ASCM Insights

Supply Chain Needs More Procurement Professionals

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Procurement specialists play a key role in supporting supply chains around the world. They serve as a critical link between suppliers and buyers and ensure that parts, inventory and products flow to where they are needed. When this link breaks, catastrophic bottlenecks result.

Procurement specialists also make significant contributions toward a company’s bottom-line growth. Organizations spend as much as two-thirds of their revenue on procurement, so even small improvements in this area can make a big difference.

However, organizations are struggling to find qualified talent to support this important area of supply chain. In fact, the job market ratio in the overall supply chain field is one qualified professional for every six open jobs, and this discrepancy is expected to grow to a 1-9 ratio. 

In its 2019 global chief procurement officer (CPO) supply chain survey, Deloitte found that 54% of surveyed CPOs believed the skills and capabilities of their current teams were not sufficient to execute their companies’ procurement strategies. This figure is up from 51% of surveyed CPOs the year before.

To fill these talent gaps, companies are turning to additional training in a variety of technical, technological, strategic and soft skills. ASCM has launched a new Supply Chain Procurement Certificate to meet this need. The certificate program includes 18-20 hours of education and a comprehensive final exam, all available online.

To share additional insight, ASCM connected with Mike Bunge, CPIM, CSCP, A.P.P., C.P.M., director of global sourcing and materials planning at Libbey Inc., to discuss the growing procurement field.   

ASCM: Procurement is so much more than just purchasing or sourcing. For our readers who are less familiar with this area of supply chain, what types of tasks typically fall under the procurement umbrella? 

Bunge: If you look at the APICS Dictionary, it defines procurement as “the business functions of procurement planning, purchasing, inventory control, traffic, receiving, incoming inspection, and salvage operations.” That’s on the tactical side. You have to have these areas solid before you focus on the more mature, strategic side. 

On the strategic side, procurement is very much about information flow. We at Libbey Inc. work very hard to share as much appropriate information with our contract factories as possible. We take market inputs in the form of customer orders and forecasts and scrub them to create anticipated needs. These needs are shared with our contract factories to inform raw materials buys and labor planning. We also need seamless communication with our inventory locations — including places that hold cycle stock, work in process and raw materials — to effectively manage inventory.  Communication is a sign of a mature procurement program, so the level of communication will vary from organization to organization.

Procurement also includes supplier auditing, scorecarding, rewards and recognition. We have formal contract factory audit programs that review sustainability, social responsibility, ethics, supply chain security compliance, quality management and operations management. These areas plus performance in terms of quality, cash, cost and service drive a scorecarding system, which is used as input for our annual awards program. 

My team also handles knowledge management, global sourcing, material planning and inventory control. And procurement professionals take leadership in regulatory compliance for both products and the way we do business.

ASCM: The role of procurement has been gaining more recognition throughout the past few years. Why do you think that is? 

Bunge: When I first started studying procurement, my mentors told me that organizations used to place their most difficult personalities in procurement. “Put the bulldog in procurement” was a widely held belief. As organizations, employee education and supply chain as a discipline matured, this changed. Information flow and collaboration became more valued than making enemies of your supply base.

Now it’s important to work with your supply base to establish a common vision. How can we expect our supply bases to support us if they don’t share the same vision as we do? As supply chains become more and more interwoven, the playing field is no longer organizations competing against other organizations but supply chains competing against other supply chains. Supply chain management as a whole has become more recognized for its strategic and tactical importance to organizations and communities. A structured, cohesive supply chain program is no longer optional, and procurement plays a big role in managing supplier relationships and ensuring information flow.

Companies also have realized that the strategy behind purchasing really adds value to an organization. It’s not just about saving three cents on a bearing that you buy a thousand of a year. Instead it’s about partnering with your supplier’s engineers to design an even better bearing that lasts twice as long, even if it costs a nickel more. It’s about value engineering. These challenges are in front of purchasing teams every day. Some companies have really recognized this value and brought procurement to the executive table with a chief procurement officer.

ASCM: Has the COVID-19 pandemic made a difference in the esteem of procurement?

Bunge: During the pandemic, many consumers gained a better understanding of what a supply chain is and how it works. I used to prepare an elevator speech to explain my role in procurement in supply chain. But now, most people understand what I do. I can talk about it in terms of toilet paper. If you walk down store aisles and there is toilet paper, a retail buyer played a role in making that happen. Product shortages have brought both the buying role and the bullwhip effect — which is very much alive and well — to the forefront. 

My team also played a critical role in helping local hospitals acquire personal protective equipment (PPE). Our local hospitals were running out of PPE and were being put on allocation by their distributors. The problem was that distributors’ warehouses were running out of the gloves, masks, goggles and other types of PPE that were needed. However, there still was PPE out there further upstream in the supply chain. Our procurement team reached out to factories directly to order the PPE and had it sent to the United States via airplane to supply our hospitals. Procurement made that happen.

This article is the first in a three-part blog series. Stay tuned for the next article, which will feature Bunge’s tips for excellent supplier relationship management. Learn about the new ASCM Supply Chain Procurement Certificate, a foundational education program designed to help both entry-level and experienced supply chain professionals expand their procurement knowledge and skills. 

Check out SCM This Week with ASCM CEO Abe Eshkenazi, ASCM Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Rennie and Mike Bunge, CSCP, CPIM, director of global sourcing and materials planning at Libbey, Inc. for a live discussion about the current state of the procurement profession. 

About the Author

Elizabeth Rennie Editor-in-Chief, SCM Now magazine, ASCM

Elizabeth Rennie is Editor-in-Chief at ASCM. She may be contacted at editorial@ascm.org.