How Can a Purchasing Professional Get “Street Cred” in
Their Company?
By Dr. Tom DePaoli
Most purchasing
professionals have skills in purchasing, negotiations, and the materials or
services that they buy. Many have certifications. They have dutifully enhanced
their skills in all these areas and pursue continuing education. Unfortunately
what many organizations value are operations skills, or what they know about
the core business and the customers.
Some purchasing
professionals have come up from the ranks or gained operational experience in
other internal jobs in the company and they are fine, but most often this is
not the case. The challenge for the purchasing professional is how to gain this
respected credibility when they are often swamped with other priorities and
crises.
One of the best
sources may be a supplier or distributor who is willing to take the time and
discuss your competition. You will be surprised about how much knowledge they
have. They are especially valuable discussing the Voice of the Customer (VOC)
and your customers’ concerns. Often they supply your customers.
Since many
purchasing professionals have a material or service specialty, my advice is to
get out on the shop floor or area where your folks actually use the material
that you source. For example, when I was in charge of purchasing wires for a paper-making machine, I went out to the paper machines and actually observed the
crew tear off a new wire and put on the new one. Yes, it was wet and hot but I
soon got a sound understanding of their issues and concerns. Another way is to
actually go on service calls with your service technicians and observe and
listen. This is usually unfiltered and sometimes you receive unflattering
feedback from the customer.
One of the best
ways is to conduct internal training with the purchasing department. Have
engineering or customer service give you training on your products and how they
work. Have them gear the training to the purchasing department. When I was in
purchasing, we asked them to design a training manual targeted to us and they
gladly did this by just modifying the existing one. The best instructors know
how to make the complicated simple and present the customers’ point of view.
One of the best courses I attended was Paper-making for the Non-papermaker
which avoided all the confusing technical argot. Another way is to have
department meetings where fellow purchasing professionals share what new
knowledge they have gained about your products and services. This is an
especially good approach because it is relatively non-threatening.
Nothing
flatters operational or shop floor personnel more than going right where they
work, and asking them to train you about their job and duties. Showing a
genuine interest goes a long way in establishing your credibility and getting
their cooperation in the future on purchasing projects such as sourcing.
Finally getting
“street cred” is not an instantaneous process. Respect does not occur
overnight. You will have to take the time and effort to build up your
reputation as a purchasing professional who can be trusted more, because they
truly understand the core business.
Contact Dr. Tom = thomasdepaoli@yahoo.com drtombooks.com for newsletter sign up https://drtombooks.com/contact/ My Books link: https://www.amazon.com/Tom-DePaoli/e/B003XSV1IQ
No comments:
Post a Comment