Hub You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Business > The Principle(s) of Negative Value - A Procurement Article

Tags

  • routines
  • product place
  • software programs
  • service which

  • Links

  • 10 Factors That Make People Buy Online
  • Breaking The Ice
  • How To Begin A Home Based Business
  • Hub You - The Principle(s) of Negative Value - A Procurement Article

    Clinching Deals With the Right Teleconferencing Service
    Imagine that for the past year you have been negotiating a huge deal with an overseas firm. On the day the deal will be finalized, your company’s big brass troops to the conference room. You are tickled pink that the deal will be completed using the teleconferencing service provider you just chose for the company. What's more, you saved a few bucks by picking a brand new start-up company!With everything and everyone posed to close the deal, what could possibly go wrong? The answer is everything! The teleconferencing monitor at the front of the room short circuits. It is engulfed in a cloud of smoke. The executives run out of the room in alarm. The next day, they call the deal off. You lose what could have been the biggest coup of your career, and all because you didn't carefully choose your company’s teleconferencing service provider.Teleconferencing Teleconferencing entails meeting among people in various locations. Closed-circuit television and other telecommunications equipment make this possible. Audio conferencing, the most common form of teleconferencing, uses various types of audio equipment. Web conferencing, on the other hand, uses
    least observed what many do not. He was the one who opined, “What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Are we all cynics then?

    I can think of at least two quick reasons why Buyers may have become cynical in today’s purchasing environment.

    (1) Buyers are overworked and undervalued

    (2) Buyers are becoming increasingly bound to software programs and routines where the single benefactor in the company is the Accounting Department. They rarely have time either to examine nor calculate the real costs of acquisition. Neither can they take steps to counteract the problem.

    How can Buyers talk about value when procedurally, professionally and psychologically they have been conditioned to and driven to focus almost entirely on price? Even though they have heard and even learned that the bundle, or the total transaction cost is the real story, both lateral and pressures from outside and managerial sources foster and encourage the “sticker price” mental

    Your Business Mission - What the Heck Do You Do, Anyway?
    Do you really need a business mission statement? Is it just some fancy words to put in that business plan that collects dust on your shelf, or is there really more to it?One of the key attributes of successful businesses is that they clearly know what they do. Defining the goal or the "mission" of your business can be the key to your success.A good mission statement does three things:" States what business you are in. " Defines your target market. " Provides inspiration for your business.One of the best examples of a mission statement comes from Levi Strauss & Co. http://www.levistrauss.com/Company/ValuesAndVision.aspx"We will market and distribute the most appealing and widely worn apparel brands. Our products define quality, style and function. We will clothe the world."Clothing the world is a pretty lofty goal, but Levi Strauss has the ability to do this for one reason--- Their founder, Levi Strauss, started the business with a mission and focus.Levi started his wholesale dry goods business in San Francisco February, 1853. Rather than hoping to make his fortune in the Gold Rush, he created a fortune by wholesa
    Some years ago while researching and writing a book on the subject of industrial Buyer & Sales relationships, I also wrote a follow up chapter for future endeavors which has rolled around in the back of my mind ever since. The piece was entitled “The Value of Value”.

    Alright, I admit it was and could still be, construed as something of a Procurement diatribe but the purpose both then and now is to assist venders recognize and comprehend how Buyers perceive and respond, to the levels of service we receive from distributors and manufacturers when there are problems. (Notice I didn’t say, “reps”)

    After 20 years of battling repetitive and inane situations and shortfalls, I thought it was time for someone to get it out into the open and talk about it plainly. Forget the graphs and the charts and Power Points, statistics and pep talks, just plain talk seemed like a reasonable solution.

    After all, how many Buyers and PA’s aren’t exhausted to the point of pending insanity, by suppliers not delivering on promises or being late, or shipping incomplete orders or failing to include documentation or … on and on and on?

    When I say “It’s a Tough World Out There…” (That’s the book title) I’m not just whistling “Dixie”. It’s a tough row to hoe on any given day in the land of industrial procurement no matter the industry, or the branch. Suppliers just don’t seem to get it sometimes.

    There comes a time when people just have to get nose to nose and hash things out.

    Was I justified in my disparagement? Are countless hours and countless dollars not spent needlessly across America re-doing what suppliers should automatically perform according to their quotations and PO deliverables?

    Daily … even hourly across this land industrial clients must repeatedly request and re-request Certificates of Compliance, MTR’s, Calibration Certificates, Proof of Shelf Life, Shipping Bills and on and on. It’s a fact. It’s no secret. It’s reality. It’s expensive. It’s aggravating.

    Anyway, in my old notes I think I labeled the problem as providing “negative value”. While suppliers regularly provide very good, in fact exceptional value in a myriad of ways on many other levels, (technical support, trouble shooting, rush deliveries and other hoop jumping exercises) the “negative values” tend to overshadow many of the positive values, simply due to their repetitiveness nature and needlessness. Enter human nature. Can it be overcome? Darned sure it can.

    So what is value and how is it measured?
    Hold on to that thought because first of all you have to understand what “price” is before you can appreciate what “value” is.

    In their book, The Portable MBA in Marketing , Alexander Hiam and Charles D. Schew provide us with an equation which builds upon Professor Dick Berry’s study on the marketers role in the marketplace. Quite simply it is this: …”the price paid by the Buyer must be equal to or less than the total satisfaction obtainable from the bundle of benefits received.

    In other words Buyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it.

    And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price.

    Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded.

    Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything else.

    Remember Oscar Wilde? In his short life span he learned a lot or at least observed what many do not. He was the one who opined, “What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Are we all cynics then?

    I can think of at least two quick reasons why Buyers may have become cynical in today’s purchasing environment.

    (1) Buyers are overworked and undervalued

    (2) Buyers are becoming increasingly bound to software programs and routines where the single benefactor in the company is the Accounting Department. They rarely have time either to examine nor calculate the real costs of acquisition. Neither can they take steps to counteract the problem.

    How can Buyers talk about value when procedurally, professionally and psychologically they have been conditioned to and driven to focus almost entirely on price? Even though they have heard and even learned that the bundle, or the total transaction cost is the real story, both lateral and pressures from outside and managerial sources foster and encourage the “sticker price” mentali

    Better Productivity Through Praise
    If there's one thing managers know best, it is this: recognition is a powerful motivator. If you praise your employees and acknowledge stellar efforts on their part, you will make them feel better about themselves and the hard work they put in.The Myth of Raises One of the key factors in improving employee productivity is recognition. In the old days, it was believed that a salary increase is the most obvious tool for encouraging employees to work harder. Since then, several studies have debunked the idea. Employees do not become more productive simply because they are paid more. After all, employees do not calculate the monetary value of every action they perform. They do not compute, for instance, how much they earn every time they finish a report or send out an email. Studies show that while a raise makes employees happy, there is an abundance of other things that can accomplish the same thing.The Power of Praise Praise is one such thing. A pat on the back is an important tool for motivating employees. For a manager to be effective, he must recognize that fairness and leadership by example are not the only two values that will inspire his staff t
    ng on promises or being late, or shipping incomplete orders or failing to include documentation or … on and on and on?

    When I say “It’s a Tough World Out There…” (That’s the book title) I’m not just whistling “Dixie”. It’s a tough row to hoe on any given day in the land of industrial procurement no matter the industry, or the branch. Suppliers just don’t seem to get it sometimes.

    There comes a time when people just have to get nose to nose and hash things out.

    Was I justified in my disparagement? Are countless hours and countless dollars not spent needlessly across America re-doing what suppliers should automatically perform according to their quotations and PO deliverables?

    Daily … even hourly across this land industrial clients must repeatedly request and re-request Certificates of Compliance, MTR’s, Calibration Certificates, Proof of Shelf Life, Shipping Bills and on and on. It’s a fact. It’s no secret. It’s reality. It’s expensive. It’s aggravating.

    Anyway, in my old notes I think I labeled the problem as providing “negative value”. While suppliers regularly provide very good, in fact exceptional value in a myriad of ways on many other levels, (technical support, trouble shooting, rush deliveries and other hoop jumping exercises) the “negative values” tend to overshadow many of the positive values, simply due to their repetitiveness nature and needlessness. Enter human nature. Can it be overcome? Darned sure it can.

    So what is value and how is it measured?
    Hold on to that thought because first of all you have to understand what “price” is before you can appreciate what “value” is.

    In their book, The Portable MBA in Marketing , Alexander Hiam and Charles D. Schew provide us with an equation which builds upon Professor Dick Berry’s study on the marketers role in the marketplace. Quite simply it is this: …”the price paid by the Buyer must be equal to or less than the total satisfaction obtainable from the bundle of benefits received.

    In other words Buyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it.

    And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price.

    Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded.

    Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything else.

    Remember Oscar Wilde? In his short life span he learned a lot or at least observed what many do not. He was the one who opined, “What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Are we all cynics then?

    I can think of at least two quick reasons why Buyers may have become cynical in today’s purchasing environment.

    (1) Buyers are overworked and undervalued

    (2) Buyers are becoming increasingly bound to software programs and routines where the single benefactor in the company is the Accounting Department. They rarely have time either to examine nor calculate the real costs of acquisition. Neither can they take steps to counteract the problem.

    How can Buyers talk about value when procedurally, professionally and psychologically they have been conditioned to and driven to focus almost entirely on price? Even though they have heard and even learned that the bundle, or the total transaction cost is the real story, both lateral and pressures from outside and managerial sources foster and encourage the “sticker price” mental

    Window Cleaning - 6 Reasons To Start Your Own Window Cleaning Business
    Of all the home businesses out there, window cleaning businesses may be one of the best kept secrets around. Most people think of window cleaning as a low paying, low potential, grunt work job, and therefore they never give it a closer look. But, in reality window cleaning is a highly profitable, low overhead, easy to start and run business.Let’s take a look at what makes window cleaning such a great business to start:-Low Startup Cost – You can literally get your business up and running for $100.00 or less.-Low Overhead – For many window cleaners the only expenses they have are gas, and replacement cleaning supplies. The only other expense you may have is liability insurance. Insurance is not required, but is nice to have. Insurance for window cleaners runs $400 to $800 per year.-Extremely Profitable – Window cleaners average between $40 to $100 dollars per hour depending upon the job and the speed of the window cleaner. It is very easy for a one or two person window cleaning operation to bring in $60,000 to $100,000 per year.-High Demand for Services – Peoples lives continue to become more busy and hectic on a daily basis, and t
    otes I think I labeled the problem as providing “negative value”. While suppliers regularly provide very good, in fact exceptional value in a myriad of ways on many other levels, (technical support, trouble shooting, rush deliveries and other hoop jumping exercises) the “negative values” tend to overshadow many of the positive values, simply due to their repetitiveness nature and needlessness. Enter human nature. Can it be overcome? Darned sure it can.

    So what is value and how is it measured?
    Hold on to that thought because first of all you have to understand what “price” is before you can appreciate what “value” is.

    In their book, The Portable MBA in Marketing , Alexander Hiam and Charles D. Schew provide us with an equation which builds upon Professor Dick Berry’s study on the marketers role in the marketplace. Quite simply it is this: …”the price paid by the Buyer must be equal to or less than the total satisfaction obtainable from the bundle of benefits received.

    In other words Buyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it.

    And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price.

    Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded.

    Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything else.

    Remember Oscar Wilde? In his short life span he learned a lot or at least observed what many do not. He was the one who opined, “What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Are we all cynics then?

    I can think of at least two quick reasons why Buyers may have become cynical in today’s purchasing environment.

    (1) Buyers are overworked and undervalued

    (2) Buyers are becoming increasingly bound to software programs and routines where the single benefactor in the company is the Accounting Department. They rarely have time either to examine nor calculate the real costs of acquisition. Neither can they take steps to counteract the problem.

    How can Buyers talk about value when procedurally, professionally and psychologically they have been conditioned to and driven to focus almost entirely on price? Even though they have heard and even learned that the bundle, or the total transaction cost is the real story, both lateral and pressures from outside and managerial sources foster and encourage the “sticker price” mental

    Beaded Jewellery Is Colorful And Mesmerizing
    The notion of fashion in world exists from the Roman era. The difference is that the priority of the type of jewelry has been changing. Some years ago gold was popular while right now variety is the name of the game. Every person is capable of creating his or her own fashion statement. Nothing but attitude matters in the world of fashion. If you can carry yourself with ease whatever you are wearing, that way you are a fashionable person. It doesn’t matter if you are wearing a sparkling diamond or as simple as beaded jewelry, attitude is all that matters.Change is the essence of the fashion world. Unlike the traditional ones like diamonds and pearls, beads are gaining popularity. It gives a different look and style to the person who endures them. Beads are colorful, elegant and mesmerizing. They are small and dainty ones which are entwined with threads giving rise to a colorful extravaganza.In Beaded Jewellery, beads varies in different sizes from millimeter to over a centimeter or several centimeters in diameter. The materials used for making these beads typically can be of glass, plastic and stone while beads made up of bone, horn, ivory, metal
    uyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it.

    And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price.

    Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded.

    Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything else.

    Remember Oscar Wilde? In his short life span he learned a lot or at least observed what many do not. He was the one who opined, “What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Are we all cynics then?

    I can think of at least two quick reasons why Buyers may have become cynical in today’s purchasing environment.

    (1) Buyers are overworked and undervalued

    (2) Buyers are becoming increasingly bound to software programs and routines where the single benefactor in the company is the Accounting Department. They rarely have time either to examine nor calculate the real costs of acquisition. Neither can they take steps to counteract the problem.

    How can Buyers talk about value when procedurally, professionally and psychologically they have been conditioned to and driven to focus almost entirely on price? Even though they have heard and even learned that the bundle, or the total transaction cost is the real story, both lateral and pressures from outside and managerial sources foster and encourage the “sticker price” mental

    Window Cleaning Tip- It's Window Cleaning, NOT Window Washing
    Whether you already own a window cleaning company or you are looking at starting your own window cleaning business. One of the first things you need to get squared away in your head is that you are a ‘window cleaner’ and in the window ‘cleaning’ business, NOT a window washer in the window washing business. You may think that the distinction is silly, but I guarantee you it is important.While some people may think that “Wallys Window Washing” is a cute name, many people associate window washers with the guy who jumps on the hood of your car at a stop light with a squirt bottle and a rag offering to wash your windows. This is not the image I want to cultivate around my business.The image you want to present to your customers is one of professionalism, legitimacy and competence. Whether in your business name or while talking to people, always use ‘window cleaning’ or ‘window cleaner’. Window cleaning sounds more professional and people associate it with educated, more refined people…the kind you would trust in your house.Now window washing on the other hand sounds more common, less educated, and very fly-by-nightish. Think of it this way; If some
    least observed what many do not. He was the one who opined, “What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Are we all cynics then?

    I can think of at least two quick reasons why Buyers may have become cynical in today’s purchasing environment.

    (1) Buyers are overworked and undervalued

    (2) Buyers are becoming increasingly bound to software programs and routines where the single benefactor in the company is the Accounting Department. They rarely have time either to examine nor calculate the real costs of acquisition. Neither can they take steps to counteract the problem.

    How can Buyers talk about value when procedurally, professionally and psychologically they have been conditioned to and driven to focus almost entirely on price? Even though they have heard and even learned that the bundle, or the total transaction cost is the real story, both lateral and pressures from outside and managerial sources foster and encourage the “sticker price” mentality because “price” is what is most often measured. I’ll say it again. In most organizations, the PO price is what is measured. Should Buyers be cynical? How can they not be?

    Here is a common example.

    Customer A purchases one million dollars of product from Supplier B annually.

    Supplier B has performance problems which the Buyer at Customer A calculates at 30% “negative value”. In other words, of the one thousand business transactions conducted between Customer A and Supplier B in one year, over three hundred problems occur within that “bundle” of deliverables per year. That’s about one per day. Either the Certs are missing or the order is short shipped or the order is late or the order arrives damaged or the material is in non conformance or the material has an expired shelf life or the material doesn’t meet spec or the product isn’t according to the drawing …. On and on but you get the point.

    The cost per Purchase order as calculated by the industry or the company is we’ll say $200.00 per order.

    The administrative cost alone to re-contact the supplier, source and identify the problem and then rectify the issue, be it returning the goods, accepting the material with a deviation, revising the price, quarantining the material, or expediting the order, whatever the case may be, has just driven up the actual transaction cost by at least $100.00 possibly to $300.00.

    The Buyer has actually brought added value into the transaction by his/her due diligence by resolving the issue. The supplier has contributed an equal amount of “negative value.”

    So my question is, “who is tracking this “negative value” and who is tracking this “positive value’” By the Buyer identifying, confirming and then resolving the problem, the actual composite price has just skyrocketed, yet the only measurement being taken is again, the purchase sticker price written on the PO.

    This is neither fair to the Buyer nor to your vender base.

    “Hold on”, you say. “The vender should be sent packing….”
    Well, maybe after some discussion they should, but is this the best solution? Are they a single source supplier? Is it single source equipment? Are they providing other “value” unable to be obtained elsewhere?

    The bottom line is that it isn’t fair to the Buyer (and his/her employer) and it isn’t fair to our supplier base not to measure these “negative values” being imposed by poor suppliers operating without conscience.

    And then there is the other side of the coin.

    Today’s suppliers are cynical too. They see the Buyer as a Price Cyclops with his/her only eye, focused entirely upon unit price and little else. Suppliers are angry that the added value they often provide for free in the form of technical advice, free samples, re-routed orders when a customer is in a pinch and rush shipments when the Buyer miscalculates, is unappreciated and largely ignored when the next quotation is offered.

    Many outside sales reps and sales managers aren’t even aware of the “negative values” being inflicted on their customers in the form of poor and inadequate services in shipping, documentation, product quality etc.

    Suppliers don’t understand that the “negative value” they have been displaying has caused them loss of future orders. The fact is Buyers can rarely … or will rarely … tell the seller why they are being passed over. The supplier must often assume it to be the sticker price.

    The bottom line is that we have problems in procurement which must be corrected internally and we have problems externally with suppliers who are screwing up regularly and royally.

    We must measure all of the values going on around us within the purchasing bundle. We must learn to measure, to assess and to report the composite values which make up the actual and complete transaction price of a product or service.

    In fairness to all of us, including the suppliers who do not inflict this “negative value” upon us so often, we must all begin to measure and to use the data in our workdays effec

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.iadvice.info/article/470/iadvice-The-Principles-of-Negative-Value--A-Procurement-Article.html">The Principle(s) of Negative Value - A Procurement Article</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.iadvice.info/article/470/iadvice-The-Principles-of-Negative-Value--A-Procurement-Article.html]The Principle(s) of Negative Value - A Procurement Article[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Small Business Productivity -How to Take Your Company to the Next Level through Efficient Technology

    Trade Show Tips and Tricks

    Why Mom Or Dad Want To Work From Home

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com