Supply chain awareness is no longer the responsibility of one business unit. Understanding all aspects of your procurement process and outcomes is now critical to business profitability — but it’s about far more than the dollar.
Find out how to shine a spotlight on the sustainability of your supply chain and be prepared with integrated and actionable insights for all your stakeholders.
As discussed in our recent whitepaper, spend intelligence can cover ethical and sustainability issues including:
It also encompasses socially and ethically-desirable principles like diversity, equity and inclusion. For RobobAI Executive, Dave Gardiner, sustainable spend intelligence can be distilled down to the simplest of terms.
“When you get a new bike or a new toy, do you know where it’s made, how it’s made and who made it?” he asks.
“Even children can understand that if it’s made by people who aren’t paid fairly, or it’s damaging the environment via production — that’s not a choice consumers want to support.”
Sustainable spend intelligence empowers companies to understand and interrogate their supply chain — for strengths and vulnerabilities. Data is the business-critical element that will help you not only understand the here and now, but the potential impacts of your procurement decisions.
Procurement is no longer restricted to reporting on cost-cutting and savings targets.
“Traditionally, it was all spend reduction but it’s changing in the modern world,” says Dave.
“Companies are being held accountable for risks and issues from modern slavery to ensuring prompt payment terms for small businesses.”
The risks of not attending to these organizational and cultural touchstones are far-reaching and include legal, environmental, regulatory and human risk. As discussed in our whitepaper, investing in ethical procurement is not only a feel-good opportunity, but it can also mitigate critical business risk.
Improving the sustainability of your spend is far from a one-step process.
To start interrogating your supply chain, you need the right data collected, cleansed, and categorized. If you’re still fumbling with your data, the impact of your analysis will be limited.
If you don’t know your suppliers as well as you should (including their suppliers), or if your approval process depends on inconsistent or variable data points, extracting genuine spend intelligence to support sustainability may be a losing battle.
Even for small-medium sized businesses, it’s near impossible to collect this data manually - the best spreadsheets aren’t up to the sophisticated analysis this demands.
Every business needs to consider their spend intelligence capabilities to keep up with the demands of sustainable, ethical supply chains.
Issues of sustainable and ethical supply are relevant to KPIs across the entire organization. The care factor extends from board members to those in senior leadership and managerial positions in finance, procurement, supply, transport, quality and operations.
This broad responsibility can make it difficult to achieve agreement on bringing procurement systems into the future. Financial dashboards might be crucial for a CFO, whereas the CPO might be focused on real-time savings and vendor rationalization, and a CRO might be focused on identifying risk exposures. But what they are all likely to agree on; the potential for positive impacts on profitability and brand value. For example, since 2008 global giant Unilever has saved $1.5B through sustainable sourcing.
Carbon offsets
With global shifts in climate change responses, measuring vendor carbon emissions and offsets will be key.
As global standards emerge, CO2e may be a key system metric as part of supplier evaluation.
Customer happiness
Hear us out. Customer happiness is a real metric that makes real change to your bottom line.
Think of it in terms of Customer Lifetime Value (CLV). Keeping customers satisfied in a way you can measure can lock in a lifetime of brand loyalty.
Your marketing department should also care about the sustainability of your spend.
Consumers are noticing, and they’re ready to vote with their wallets. There’s no room for passing the buck – if it’s part of your supply chain, you’re responsible.
[1] https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0022242919825649