17 Most Common Procurement Problems and Their Solution

20/09/2020by scv

How many Procurement Problems you face in your day to day job? Would you be able to list them? And which ones will be the biggest pain points to resolve?

For me the biggest problem I see for any procurement function is to shifting procurement’s ‘traditional focus on short-term cost savings’ to a more holistic objective that includes strategic supplier relationships, giving preference to longer-term cost efficiencies, and working with suppliers to identify opportunities to develop more innovative products and services

In today’s businesses progressively see procurement systems as vital strategic contributors to their value plan and matching end-user goals. A dependable procurement system is one created to improve accuracy, efficiency, and speed. Due to this viewpoint observed by many, the necessity of standardizing business procedures within procurement and ensuring best practices becomes very important to the overall business plan.

But despite all safety measures taken in creating a standardized business strategy, procurement problems are still known to occur. Procurement Problems ranging from organizational inadequacies to human mistakes can again deliver adverse effects to a business procurement and purchasing capability. Below is a list of the Most Common Procurement Problems we encounter across various organizations & Their Solution offering simple ways to fix them.

 

17 Most Common Procurement Problems

1)    Allowing Poor Quality for Lower Costs

In today’s business world, cost still plays a vital role in consumer products. We still see businesses hurtling down on cost even when the effects are detrimental to the product’s quality. In countless scenarios, the quality dimension gets altered to save cost and management holds high optimisms the quality risk does not get discovered.

SOLUTION: The use of consumer feedbacks has become helpful in striking a better balance, especially where an acceptable profit margin is reached.

To help you solve this issue we have created Procurement KPI Dashboard  (Customizable Template) which you can use to track all your key quality and cost KPI. Identify declining trends, see which KPI are below targets, and drive remediation actions.

 

2)    Providing Unclear Specifications & Requirements

Providing Unclear Specifications & Requirements during procurement does not always turn out well and fits the “help me help you” scenario. Usually, suppliers could offer a much better job in delivering what client requests if the organization make available clear and defined requirements during procurement.

SOLUTION: A clear details or specification of what your organization requires would go a long way in solving this Procurement Problem.

 

3)    Not doing Supplier Assessment Before Doing Business

Organizations habitually leave out Supplier Assessment and stick to what suppliers promise on paper. Keeping suppliers at arm’s length without any form of Assessment before doing business leaves room for irregularities and untrustworthy experiences. A lack of trust on any side of the deal leads to various procurement problems.

SOLUTION: Conduct thorough supplier evaluation criteria and/or assessment before you select any supplier. Once selected actively include major suppliers during problem-solving processes. It leads to positive outcomes for overall growth. Treat your supplier as strategic business partners.

 

4)    Not Fully Understanding Supplier Capabilities

If you do not have a clear understanding of supplier capabilities, then it is a sure way to get dissatisfied when possible procurement problems arise. Placing high expectations on a supplier to swiftly complete a procurement deal beyond his capability usually tends to be disastrous at the end. This procurement problem is amongst the biggest challenges facing procurement professionals when related to suppliers. The process, from identifying the best to ensuring stable and quality delivery, can be vital in seeking much more from your suppliers.

SOLUTION: Along with the usual procurement process, procurement professionals need to continually monitor suppliers to ensure all delivery demands and standards are met. Start with gradual increment with timelines in place and quality agreed. In other words, hold a regular supply review, discuss key performance KPI, and agree on action and improvement ideas.

 

5)    Not Agreeing on Important KPI

Following the above point, important KPI’s are vital to executing best practice procurement. Best practice in supply chains function using five essential dimensions (variation, variety, velocity, visibility, and volume). Many procurement experts do not appreciate the need for critical questioning that addresses what a new supplier brings into the balance. Factors like purchasing price variation, percentage cost reduction, quick delivery, etc. can be valuable, but not enough.  Additionally, these measures often result in conflict with significant strategic actions that offer a real and sustainable impact.

SOLUTION: Once KPI’s are agreed they should be the main agenda item for regular supply review. The management system should employ measures involving a procurement system that offers a balance between cost, customer value, quality, and speed.

 

6)    Lack of Transparency

The withholding of crucial information by organizations tend to create procurement problem that limits suppliers from offering jam-packed values to clients. Critical Data like market trends, product changes, and sales forecasts, generate unwanted surprises that may hamper your relationship with suppliers.

SOLUTION: Ask for the supplier’s demand or details required to offer quality services. Keep a request line open about these demands and also updates whenever there are new requirements.

 

7)    Lack of Trust

In cases of zero trust for a supplier, such organizations usually hold suppliers at arm’s length. The treatment is also similar to one filled with zero confidence. The show of lack of trust towards suppliers may not go down well with some, and this could lead to a variety of procurement problems. But still, maintain safety first, do not trust blindly.

SOLUTION: Show some level of trust towards your key suppliers. The light show of confidence would aid your problem-solving methods and yield positive improvements.

 

8)    Doing Business Without a Formal Contract

I still get astonished to find out many companies have more than 40% suppliers in their supplier’s list without a formal contract. I would consider this as one of the most common procurement problems.

The creation of legal contracts and paper works may be time-consuming and challenging. This procurement problem could arise when there is regular request (for Expressions of Interest, Proposal, Quotation, etc.) and managing them takes up time. Such procedures ought to be straight, fair, and thoroughly implemented. Even though it requires an excellent undertaking for procurement teams, avoiding them may further create more procurement problems.

SOLUTION: Create a straight, fair, and thoroughly implemented approach for formal contracts. No matter how challenging the process may be, business is business and should be done with official agreements. And it should be done regardless of how big or small the supplier is.

 

9)    Not so Clear Business Procurement Function Processes

While normal basic purchasing processes are usually well defined, several equally essential procurements function processes that are not clearly defined. For Example, the comprise of the key processes like supplier development, Procurement function training & development, Procure-to-Pay (P2P). JIT Purchasing and strategic sourcing. Misplacing these processes could lead to reactive procurement problems.

SOLUTION: Make use of procurement systems & leadership principles that offers a clear and compelling business process.

 

10) Accidental Orders

Ordering wrong items or quantities can lead to serious procurement problems with your suppliers. Nowadays, the speed of transactions leaves little or no room for ordering errors. Though not common, Accidental Orders would necessitate several checks and balances all through the system. If no protocol permits or supports reversals and safeguards against mistakes, then such problems are likely to take more time.

SOLUTION: If you maintain a good connection with your supplier, an immediate follow-up would be activated to rectifying such mistakes. Good connections would save you from significant difficulties in the long run.

 

11) Continue Working with Inflexible Suppliers

Several procurement decisions are made alongside the business risk management strategy. Things like low costs better reflect on the result of company activity. Nevertheless, some suppliers may not make available discounts or maintain the inclusion of specific surcharges. As a skilled procurement professional, often find room for negotiation with your suppliers.

SOLUTION: Before selecting a supplier, see what negotiating options like discounts would be beneficial to your business. Stick with suppliers who identify and accommodate your business desire to maximize performance.

 

12) Not Having a Dedicated Development Plan for Buyers/Procurement Managers

Whilst most companies ask for CIPS or ISM, but very few actually go out and support their procurement team members to continuously develop functionally. I have seen lot of buyers asking for monitory support and get rejected due to “business reasons”. In my observation, this is one of the most common procurement problems.

SOLUTION: We as business leaders know the importance of technical knowledge, so why don’t support it? If there are limited funds then there are a lot of Procurement Courses, Procurement Blogs, and Procurement Books which can really benefit in development in procurement function and also help buyers to prepare for the next procurement interview.

 

13) Lack of accurate data

Creating purchase orders based on erroneous procurement data can cause excess inventory, inventory shortages, and other supplementary procurement challenges with the potential to directly affect your organization’s bottom line.

SOLUTION: Whenever you want to make procurement decisions, make use of only accurate and reliable data.

 

14)  Continue focus on Cost Reduction

As mentioned earlier cost reduction is the key focus for most procurement functions. An often-desired goal is having procurements accomplished on time and under budget. So, a decrease in cost for the latter may help realize some savings. But several problems may arise if more focus is placed on going under budget.

The most classic example where procurement function gets caught is outsourcing to Best Cost Countries (or Low-Cost Countries) with considering implication to total wall-to-wall cost, quality, delivery, lead time and in turn inventory.

SOLUTION: With every cost reduction project, the procurement team must consider implications on wall-to-wall cost, quality, delivery, lead time, freight cost, trade compliance issues and in turn inventory. It is not always necessary that if the piece price is low, it is a good thing!

 

15) Not Knowing Which Supplier to Develop or Which to Replace.

Identifying which supplier to develop or replace requires careful attention to retaining the right supplier for your business is another common procurement problem. Therefore, I have written an article on “Are You More Like a Reactive or Strategic Supplier Development Professional?”, where I have given a perspective of which supplier to develop strategically and which to develop reactively.  Provision of the necessary support and services is always essential to continuous development.

SOLUTION: Investigate specific suppliers’ motivations to participate in supplier development programmes and how buyers can influence suppliers who are not dependent upon them to participate in supplier training and technology/ product development.

 

16) Ignoring the Costs of Time

Lower prices from suppliers habitually come with long lead times. We hardly ever see organizations provide a comprehensive analysis of those protracted lead times and their cost implication, missed deadlines, waste, working capital, and overall consumer satisfaction.

SOLUTION: Time is always a significant factor for procurements, select a supplier whose price range meets your organization’s demand.

 

17) Tolerating Unnecessary Risk

All procurement systems ought to comprise of risk assessment covering supply commotion and the subsequent implications. There are too many circumstances where strategic procurement could encounter unnecessary risk that may lead to procurement problems.

SOLUTION: Be open about your possible risk options, and implement measures to tackle all Unnecessary Risk.

 

CONCLUSION

Several organizations are often faced with a variety of procurement problems and challenges. The implementation of best practice procurement systems would seek to integrate different measures and high-performance business processes to solve these problems. I recently have an interview with Procurement Expert Richard Beaumont argues why Procurement professionals do not need to be on the Board, why buyers will be obsolete, how to manage your boss who is not procurement expert and why sorting data is key! I think you will find it useful.

scv

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