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2-3. Goals of the Purchasing Function. Provide an uninterrupted flow of materials, supplies and services required to operate the organizationKeep inventory investment and loss at a minimumMaintain and improve qualityFind or develop competent suppliersStandardize, where possible, the items bought
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1. 2-1
2. CHAPTER TWO Objectives and Organization for Effective Purchasing and Supply Management
3. 2-3 Goals of the Purchasing Function Provide an uninterrupted flow of materials, supplies and services required to operate the organization
Keep inventory investment and loss at a minimum
Maintain and improve quality
Find or develop competent suppliers
Standardize, where possible, the items bought
Purchase required items and services at lowest cost
4. 2-4 Goals of the Purchasing Function Achieve harmonious, productive working relationships with other functional areas within the organization
Accomplish the purchasing objectives at the lowest possible level of administrative costs
Improve the organization’s competitive position
5. 2-5 Purchasing’s Prime Decision Authority Select the supplier
Use whichever pricing method is appropriate
Question the specifications
Monitor contacts with potential suppliers
6. 2-6 Various Titles of the Chief Purchasing Officer Director of Purchasing
VP of Purchasing
Manager of Purchasing
VP of Materials Management
Materials Manager
7. 2-7 Purchasing Reporting Relationships
8. 2-8 Functions that Report to Purchasing: CAPS Study
9. 2-9 Purchasing Activities Purchasing/buying
Purchasing research
Inventory control
Transportation
Environmental and investment recovery/disposal
Forecasting and planning
Outsourcing and subcontracting
Nonproduction/nontraditional purchases
Supply chain management
10. 2-10 Typical Purchasing Organization Structure - Medium Sized Company
11. 2-11 Potential Advantages and Disadvantages of Centralization Advantages
greater buying specialization
ability to pay for talent
consolidation of requirements - clout
coordination of policies and procedures
effective planning and research
common suppliers
proximity to major organizational decision makers
critical mass
firm brand recognition and stature
reporting line - power
strategic focus
cost of purchasing low Disadvantages
narrow specification and job boredom
lack of job flexibility
corporate staff appears excessive
tendency to minimize legitimate differences in requirements
lack of recognition of unique needs
focus on corporate requirements, not on business unit strategic requirements
even common suppliers behave differently in geographic and market segments
distance from users
tendency to create organizational silos
customer segments require adaptability to unique situations
top management not able to spend time on suppliers
lack of business unit focus
high visibility of purchasing costs
12. 2-12 Potential Advantages and Disadvantages of Decentralization Advantages
easier coordination/communication with operating department
speed of response
effective use of local sources
business unit autonomy
reporting line simplicity
undivided authority and responsibility
suits purchasing personnel preference
broad job definition
geographical, cultural, political, environmental, social, language, currency appropriateness
hide cost of supply Disadvantages
more difficult to communicate among business units
encourages users not to plan ahead
operational versus strategic focus
too much focus on local sources - ignores better supply opportunities
no critical mass in organization for visibility/ effectiveness - “whole person syndrome”
lacks clout
suboptimization
business unit preferences not congruent with corporate preferences
small differences magnified
reporting at low level in organization
limits functional advancement opportunities
ignores larger organizational considerations
limited expertise for requirements
lack of standardization
cost of supply relatively high
13. 2-13 Potential Advantages of the Hybrid Structure
14. 2-14 Purchasing and Supply Teams Cross-functional teams
Teams with suppliers
Teams with customers
Teams with suppliers and customers
Supplier councils - key suppliers
Purchasing councils - purchasing personnel only
Commodity management teams
Consortiums
15. 2-15 Team Leader Responsibilities Work with the team to establish and commit to performance goals
Secure individual member involvement and commitment
Manage internal team conflict
Help maintain team focus and direction
Secure required organizational resources
16. 2-16 Team Leader Responsibilities Prevent team domination by a member or function
Deal with internal and external obstacles confronting the team
Coordinate multiple tasks and manage the status of team assignments
Clarify and help define each team member’s role
Provide performance feedback to members
17. 2-17 Keys for Successful Consortiums Reducing total costs for the consortium members
Through lower prices, higher quality and better services
Eliminating and avoiding all real and perceived violations of anti-trust regulations
Installing sufficient safeguards to avoid real and perceived threats concerning disclosure of confidential and proprietary information
18. 2-18 Keys for Successful Consortiums Mutual and equitable sharing of risks, costs and benefits to all stakeholders, including buying firms/members, suppliers and customers
Maintaining a high degree of trust and professionalism
Maintaining a strong similarity among consortium members and compatibility of needs, capabilities, philosophies and corporate cultures