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Home::Negotiation
Suppliers as Your Partners in Cost Reduction
Author : Vera Haitayan
This article is one of the many articles still to come in which I will discuss very basic yet proven techniques that you could use immediately in your encounters with your suppliers. Oh but wait, to find any value in this article, you must be a firm believer that Purchasing strategies have evolved from just 1) focusing on price and 2) focusing on quality, reliability, responsiveness and total cost to a much broader focus of building supplier relationships. Did you know that for each $1.00 you save in your “total cost of ownership” reduction efforts, you will improve your bottom line profitability by $1.00? And did you also know that most companies do not get this concept and continue focusing their resources in all the wrong places? Now is the time when I want to share with you 4 basic rules that have proven to work and work very well to help you create the partnership relationship with your supplier and allow them to equally benefit from the experience as well. Rule #1: Getting direct cost savings is really a thing in the past. Getting savings has become increasingly difficult to achieve as your suppliers face similar predicaments themselves and operate with very little room in their margins to wiggle. Rule #2: To affect your bottom line, using 80/20 rule, work on reasonable incentives to approach your top 20 suppliers with and build a “preferred” supplier base. Rule #3: Communicate to your suppliers on “how to” earn a “preferred” supplier status and what is required of them to remain a “preferred” supplier. Rule #4: Tell your suppliers what’s in it for them (WIIFT) as they partner with you and build a “preferred” relationship. To earn a “preferred” status means that your supplier will have the first shot to quote on new business, parts and project. In fact you can go so far as to create “earn a point” program every time you achieve your cost reduction goals using these techniques as they apply to your business. Supplier earns a previously agreed upon point(s) when: 1) Shared tooling costs or shared engineering costs on a project 2) Extended terms: 60 or 90 day billing terms for a period of one year 3) Certified as “ship to stock” on all supplied parts or assemblies for a period of one year and remain compliant for every year thereafter 4) Ship zero defects for a period of one year and continue as such for every year thereafter 5) Work with purchasing, manufacturing or engineering to add value Working with your suppliers to explore these techniques not only presents opportunities for you to reduce your “total cost of ownership” but also helps your suppliers to review, improve and streamline their processes and grow internally to be able to meet your expectations and earn that “preferred” supplier status. Use this “total supply chain cost” model as your guide to isolate and focus on the actual cost elements impacting your bottom line profitability. Total supply chain cost= Buying price= +Supplier performance cost +Cost of acquisition +Out-of-sync planning -Speculation returns +Speculation cost +Mfg. cost +Selling cost +Distribution cost +Profit =Selling price Vera Haitayan, Principal Consultant of The Leadership Laboratory., a California-based employee development and process improvement consulting firm and is the senior editor of The Stepping Stone Newsletter featuring leadership and process improvement best practices.
http://www.1leadershiplab.com
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Suppliers as Your Partners in Cost Reduction To earn a “preferred” status means that your supplier will have the first shot to quote on new business, parts and project. In fact you can go so far as to create “earn a point” program every time you achieve your cost reduction goals ...Suppliers as Your Partners in Cost Reduction This article is one of the many articles still to come in which I will discuss very basic yet proven techniques that you could use immediately in your encounters with your suppliers. Oh but wait, to find any value in this article, ... Atricle Dump: Suppliers as Your Partners in Cost Reduction at www ... s. Selling price. Beware Of Partnering Promises Validate Why And Who To Engage With ... Supply Chain Stability – Marketers trade exclusivity with suppliers in exchange for investment in quality, cost reduction, and priority speed to market; The supplier is able to make long-term commitments at stable levels and pass on the ... Suppliers as Your Partners in Cost Reduction This article is digit of the some articles ease to embellish in which I module handle rattling humble still proven techniques that you could ingest directly in your encounters with your suppliers. ... Gambling news to 29 August 2008 “The people who make your industry so wealthy … are so addicted to your product that they will jeopardise their own financial well-being and the well-being of their families,” he said. “They will steal from their partners, their bosses ... Keys To Negotiating Well ... BEST Employees –While Youre WaitingSuppliers as Your Partners in Cost ReductionDetermine Your Rate And Negotiate Carefully With Unreasonable ClientsDont Be Afraid Of SilenceNegotiating Technology ContractsSo Whats Your Argument?30 ... The Growing Case For Information Governance And, if you're up for even more punishment, what happens when information starts flowing between partners and suppliers? As an example, if I outsource billing to a service provider, whose fault is it if something bad happens? ... Negotiating Skills Suppliers as Your Partners in Cost Reduction This article is one of the many articles still to come in which I will discuss very basic yet proven techniques that you could use immediately in your encounters with your suppliers. ... Green Credits There is no extra cost to the taxpayer. Example Activities (indicative)Value. Reducing electricity consumption by 1 kW 1 Green Credit. Reducing water consumption by 10 litres 1 Green Credit. Insulating your home 1000 Green Credits ...
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