Market Your Purchasing Successes with the Use of
Storyboards
By Tom DePaoli
Purchasing
professionals need to realize that they must not only market their purchasing
strategies but their successes. Many purchasing professionals neglect to create
a marketing plan for their organization. I use the term marketing plan
synonymously with communication plan.
Some of the
goals and techniques of your marketing-communication plan should be to educate
top management on your strategic plans, publish results of supplier performance
and surveys, publish internal customer survey results, educate personnel on
purchasing and supply chain principles, emails, hold round-tables, hold town
meetings, use social media, utilize newsletters, use a supply chain specific
web page, monthly letters, and announcement of successes.
Storyboards are
a great way to market your successes. Storyboards require you to be disciplined
in your message and fully understand your results and assertions. You must
limit your words and concentrate on the essentials. Thus you must communicate
explicitly and right to the point for your audience. You need to strip away the
technical argot and make sure the audience can easily grasp what you have
accomplished, even with a very limited knowledge of purchasing.
Storyboards
should adhere to a lean principle of visibility. Storyboards must be understood
quickly with the maximum use of graphics, not words, spreadsheets or numbers.
This is not an easy task, as a consultant we would often spent hours and days
trying to accomplish this with a storyboard. Obviously purchasing often does
not have the talent (full-time illustrator) or resources to do this
meticulously, but this is intended to be a guide.
There is no one
catch-all formula or template for storyboards. Often how you employ them and
your particular style depends on the culture and communication norms of your
organization. The important aspect is to make sure that you communicate your
successes in a manner that can be readily understood by both purchasing and
non-purchasing personnel. Think of storyboards as intelligent commercials that
must be brief, easily remembered and upbeat.
I have provided
an example of a storyboard that we used to communicate a purchase
order success story. The organization that it was used in was very heavily into
Lean Six Sigma, Kaizens and the DMAIC methodology
(Define-Measure-Analyze-Improve-Control). We used this familiar DMAIC format to
help people understand and follow what we did. It still has too many words and
numbers but we needed to ensure people realized the scope of what we had
accomplished. The storyboard was well received and readily understood by
employees. I highly recommend purchasing and supply chain professionals
consider using storyboards to communicate your successes.
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
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