A blog post by Preeti Havaldar
By
definition, Strategic Sourcing is an organized and collaborative approach for
optimizing an organization’s supply chain and improving the overall value by
reducing costs and delivery cycle times and improving quality.
The objectives of strategic sourcing are:
· Reduce costs
· Improve quality of service
· Identify areas of improvement
· Examine supplier relationships across the organization
· Develop and implement contracts with standardized terms and conditions
· Leverage entire organization’s spend
Following are
the steps involved in the strategic sourcing process:
Defining
supply chain goals is a crucial part of the strategic sourcing process. A clear
vision helps direct the company’s cash flow in the right path. Identifying
capacity of the current processes and scope for improvement is the next most
important step in the process. It helps to identify the most utilized or bottleneck
processes in the system and develop strategies to improve their performance.
The company should also classify their processes as value-adding and non
value-adding and offload the non value-adding activities from the critical path
to help enhance overall performance. This is the point where outsourcing
becomes an advantage. Developing effective outsourcing strategies can help
boost the overall performance.
A common
misstep when designing strategic sourcing is that organizations limit strategic
sourcing to the objective of cutting costs. In a broader sense, strategic
sourcing can impact the financials of the company by improving the procurement
processes. A good strategic sourcing strategy should take advantage of
information systems, supply chain management tools, e-procurement strategies
and supplier networks.
When
implemented in an efficient manner, strategic sourcing can lead to competitive
advantage of supply chains by lowering costs, minimizing complexity for end
users, optimizing supplier relationships and improving quality.
Inspite of the great advantages of strategic sourcing, does the primary driver still remains "cost-cutting" ?
ind.ntou.edu.tw/~ericting/download/SCM/Wisner/Chapter%2004.ppt
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