Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Get the mobile app. Download the transcript. Sponsor: Tradeshift.
Dana Gardner: Hi, this is Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, and you're listening to BriefingsDirect.
Gardner |
To tell us how procurement has become strategic for UPS, we're now joined by Jamie Dawson, Vice-President of UPS's Global Business Services Procurement Strategy in Atlanta. Welcome, Jamie.
Jamie Dawson: Thank you, Dana.
Gardner: Tell me about some of the major trends that you are seeing in procurement and how you're changing your strategy to adjust?
Dawson: We're seeing a lot of evolution in the marketplace in terms of both technology and new opportunities in ways to procure goods and that really is true around the globe. We're adjusting our strategy and also challenging some of our business partners to come along with us.
Gardner: Tell me about the size of your organization. What volume of goods and services are we talking about in your businesses services procurement?
Dawson: We're a $60 billion company. Last year, our total expenses were somewhere in the $50-billion range, lots of goods and services flowing around the globe.
Gardner: And so, any way that you can find new efficiency, new spend management benefits that turns into some significant savings.
Dawson: Absolutely.
Gardner: Now that you're looking for new strategies and new solutions, what is it in procurement that’s of most interest to you and how are you using technology in ways you didn't before?
Collaboration and partnerships
Dawson: One of the new ways is a combination or partnerships both with third parties as well as our own internal business partners. We're collaborating with other functions, and procurement is not something we are doing to them; we're working with them to understand what their needs are and working with their suppliers as well.
Dawson |
Dawson: Procurement-as-a-service has a certain niche play. There will always be basic buy-and-sell items, even as individuals. There are some things you don’t research, but you just go out and buy. There are other things for which you do a lot of research and you look into different solutions.
There are different things that will cause you to research more. Maybe it's a competitive advantage, maybe you're looking for an opportunity in a new space or a new corner of the globe. So, you'll do a lot more research, and your solutions need to be scalable. If you create and start in Europe, maybe you'll also want to use it in Asia. If you start in the US, maybe you want to use elsewhere.
Gardner: It sure sounds like, during a period of experimentation, that where the boundary was between things that you would buy by rote versus things you would buy with a lot of expertise or research is shifting or changing. Are you experimenting as an organization, and what is interesting to you as you look at new opportunities from those people who are in the procurement network space?
There
will always be complex areas that require solution orientation more
than just price. They need a deep understanding of industry, knowledge,
and partnership.
Dawson: There will always be complex areas that require solution orientation more than just price. They need a deep understanding of industry, knowledge, and partnership. There are a lot of other areas where the opportunities are expanding every day. [See related post, ChainLink analyst on how cloud-enabled supply chain networks drive companies to better manage finances, procurement.]
Gardner: As you think about what you've done and been able to accomplish, do you have any advice for other organizations that are also starting to think about modernizing and strategizing, rather than just doing it in the traditional old way? What would you tell them?
Dawson: Two things. One would be within the procurement organizations to be open to new ideas. And second, get the rest of the organization behind you, because you're going to need their support.
Gardner: It seems that procurement as a function is just far more strategic than it used to be. Not only are you able to get more goods and services, but you can save significant amounts of money. Do you feel that your profile as an organization within UPS is rising or expanding in terms of the role you play in the larger organization? [See related post, CPO expert Joanna Martinez extols the virtues of redesigning procurement for strategic business agility.]
Don't have to sell
Dawson: I'm certainly aware that the knowledge of the capabilities and the demonstrated successes are now being recognized throughout the organization. And it becomes self feeding. You actually get on a roll and can further expand the capabilities once that knowledge is out there; you don’t have to sell.
Gardner: Last question, looking to the future, on a vision level, what’s really exciting to you? What are you thinking that might be more important to you in how you do business two or three years from now? It could be technology, suppliers, ecosystems, cloud enabled intelligence, that sort of thing.
Dawson: It’s a very interesting question, because it’s almost the same answer. Your greatest fear is the greatest benefit. I listened to what we just heard on the Tradeshift Go tool, and it’s crazy how exciting that this is. You heard all the questions in the room about how to adapt that to what you already have today? The world still exists as it exists today.
There's this huge transition period where we were bolting on these fantastic great ideas to our existing infrastructure. That transition into what's new and really embracing it is the most exciting of all.
So, there's this huge transition period where we were bolting on these fantastic great ideas to our existing infrastructure. That transition into what's new and really embracing it is the most exciting of all.
Gardner: Disruption can be good and disruption can be bad.
Dawson: It will be a challenging journey.
Gardner: We've been joined by Jamie Dawson, Vice President of UPS Global Business Services Procurement Strategy in Atlanta. I really appreciate your time.
Dawson: Thank you.
Gardner: And a big thank you as well to our audience for joining this Tradeshift-sponsored BriefingsDirect business innovation for procurement case study on how UPS is modernizing and streamlining its procure-to-pay processes.
We've heard technology innovations and new services from such cloud suppliers as Tradeshift translate into business impacts and how consumers and suppliers of services and goods can best prepare to improve their procurement and supply chain activities. This business process innovation exchange comes to you in conjunction with the Tradeshift Innovation Day held in New York on June 22, 2016.
I'm Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, your host and moderator. Thanks again for listening, and do come back next time.
Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Get the mobile app. Download the transcript. Sponsor: Tradeshift.
Transcript of a discussion on how consumers and suppliers of services and goods can best prepare to improve their procurement and supply chain activities. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2016. All rights reserved.
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