2016 Global SRM Research - Supplier relationships in tech

CASESTUDY

CONSIDER RELATIONSHIPS EARLIER The SRM team encouraged stakeholders from the commercial function to think about the relationships with suppliers from the beginning of the process: from analysis of the market to sourcing, rather than after deals were done. State of Flux helped to segment Mars’ suppliers to see if they represented a transactional relationship, which can be managed based purely on performance, or a strategic relationship, which requires mutual investment to deliver value. TESTING THE CONCEPT Developing this theory was phase one of the project. In phase two, Mars worked with State of Flux to develop a pilot programme that it implemented with key suppliers and stakeholders. It carefully selected stakeholders by finding those with a passion for the project who could put forward suppliers they thought they could work with best. It then identified if the resources were available to deploy on the project and came up with six suppliers to invite to a formal introductory session, supported by State of Flux. It was a while before the penny dropped with some suppliers, says Phillips. “One supplier took until 2pm on the first day before saying: ‘Mars is serious about this, isn’t it?’ The head of commercial replied: ‘Yes, this not business as usual, we are going to change.’” Nine months into phase two and the project is overcoming any initial scepticism. It is starting to see enthusiasm from stakeholders in different regions, which the project team is having to manage. Part of the governance is to ensure early peaks of enthusiasm do not detract from longer term goals. “Some see it as a shiny new object and will be keen until another one comes along,” Phillips says. “We have to temper that enthusiasm. Rather than saying ‘no’ we say ‘yes, be part of the pilot, as long as you bring two suppliers in from your business region and provide incremental resources to invest in the relationship.’

“In the meantime, our business units have been asked to continue to focus on developing and then executing great category strategies that take into account our full business and stakeholder needs, and are also reflective of the external business environment,” Phillips says. BUILDING THE TECHNOLOGY Mars is also supporting its SPRM programme through the piloting of new software. Although it uses SAP Ariba strategic sourcing solutions across the business, Mars is evaluating State of Flux’s Statess solution to test its more detailed functionality built specifically to support SRM processes. Mars is looking for a technical solution that supports the full performance and relationship experience between customer and supplier. It’s a significant undertaking. Mars is a huge organisation, with sales of $33 billion, more than 77,000 employees and 11 or more brands worth more than $1 billion. It has a 1,200-strong commercial team. The SRM teamwill be rolling out the pilot for at least the next 12 to 18 months before it evaluates the benefits and plans the final delivery phase. At this stage Mars is reluctant to put a savings target on the pilot. Nonetheless, the SRM team has learned a lot since the project began. To Mars, SPRM requires an understanding of the supplier’s point of view, an approach to segmenting the suppliers able to innovate in the right areas and a governance process that guides stakeholders in the way they manage suppliers. The scope, breadth and ambition of project demonstrates how important SRM is in supporting Mars’ growth.

SPEAKINGTOTHE BIGCONSULTANCIES Mars’ revealing supplier survey was part of its programme to improve supplier relationships and performance to help meet the challenges in innovation and environmental and ethical goals. It started by looking for a partner among several of the world’s largest consultancies. While their research offered strategic insight, it lacked sufficient detail in understanding the full breadth of Mars’ thousands of suppliers, Phillips says. However, Steven Brunner, Mars’ indirect procurement vice president and chief procurement officer, discovered State of Flux through activities with Procurement Leaders, the global procurement community and magazine. “We’d never looked at smaller boutique consultancies previously, but what State of Flux advocated, with its surveys and insight, seemed to resonate with us,” Phillips says. Phillips came into Mars’ SPRM team from a background in project management. Working with State of Flux, he began to define the Mars SPRM programme. “We know Rome wasn't built in a day; we needed to address the challenge in sensible stages, so we started by defining what our version of supplier performance and relationship management needed to be,” says Phillips. When we started, we knew we needed something, but we did not know what it was. Now we know we should focus on the critical few suppliers, rather than ones everyone thinks are important. Part of the challenge is to help the organisation recognise we need to be constantly making that choice. To do that you have got to change the sourcing mind set.” Mark Phillips Supplier Performance and Relationship Management (SPRM) programme lead

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12/10/2016 19:30

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