Simplifying
Technology is a compelling vision for the procurement organization
of the future. Challenged by issues of slow adoption, lack of
resources and perennial technology bottlenecks, procurement leaders
are re-defining their search for the right solution. Find out
why 'simplifying technology' may be a smarter alternative to the
conventional approach.
Table Of
Content
>
<< Looking
Back at Procurement Technology
>
Is Technology
To Be Blamed
>
Lets Simplify Technology!
>
How will simplification
of technology help?
>
Tech Trends worth watching
SAMPLE CHAPTER << Looking Back at Procurement Technology B2B Procurement has come a long way in
the past 10 years. Professionals have lived through technology
hype cycles, and have spent millions of dollars automating and
improving sourcing and purchasing processes. Cost Savings remained
the primary driver for transformation, all throughout the journey.
First there was darkness. Enterprises
realized that the biggest savings opportunities lay trapped in
the silos of diverse procurement systems. Then there was light.
The insight gleaned from aggregating and cleansing spend data
for the entire enterprise led to consolidation of the supplier
base and creation of a preferred supplier pool with national and
global contracts. The bottom-line savings that could potentially
be realized through better sourcing far outweighed benefits accrued
via process improvements or outsourcing. Investments in strategic
sourcing platforms soared as a result, and electronic procurement
platforms took a backseat.
Circa 2006 - the savings opportunities
identified remains 'potential savings' in many cases as organizations
grapple with the challenge of 'compliance'. There is no dearth
of information. Actionable information is not 'acted' on in many
instances, because of the dire shortage of people resources. There
is a compelling need for 'change agents'. Without people who can
manage the transformation agenda in-house, adoption of technology
remains severely impaired.
Finally the finger points to technology itself. Corporate executives
now question the merit of making multi-million dollar investments
in technology platforms, when their organizational maturity demands
something different. Users complain that procurement technology
has become unnecessarily complicated, resulting in poor adoption.
Many believe that the problem is about setting the wrong priorities.
Huge investments have been made in sourcing processes without
paying attention to data - the core underlying framework that
powers visibility. Certainly it should have been 'visibility first',
followed by better sourcing processes. The value of Contract Management
that comes via collaboration and better document management is
insignificant, if the contract is not linked to the procurement
process in an intelligent and meaningful way.