Thereโs a new buzz phrase in the air: Supplier Relationship Management (SRM). Corporate executives know itโs necessary, but thereโs only one problem. Nobody yet knows how to do it. Or they think itโs all about bashing your vendors over the head until they reduce the price another 4%. Supplier Relati
Supplier relationship management
โ Scribed by Christian Schuh, Michael F. Strohmer, Stephen Easton, Mike Hales, Alenka Triplat (auth.)
- Publisher
- Apress
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 183
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
There’s a new buzz phrase in the air: Supplier Relationship Management (SRM). Corporate executives know it’s necessary, but there’s only one problem. Nobody yet knows how to do it. Or they think it’s all about bashing your vendors over the head until they reduce the price another 4%. Supplier Relationship Management: How to Maximize Vendor Value and Opportunity changes all that.
Containing the best and most innovative advice from the operations and procurement experts at consultant AT Kearney, this book shows that SRM is at root a strategic discussion requiring cross-functional interaction and internal alignment at the highest levels. It requires an honest appraisal of the value that suppliers now bring to your firm, as well as their potential value. It then requires a frank and constructive business-to-business dialogue about how to improve the relationship. When this happens, a company reaps myriad benefits, ranging from new opportunity to added value to competitive advantage—and, quite likely, to overall (and sometimes substantial) cost reductions.
This book shows the most concrete methods you can use today to:
- Identify value-adding opportunities in the supply chain
- Work closely with suppliers to maximize the benefits
- Work the "Critical Cluster" of suppliers, where the greatest opportunity for advantage lies
- Review suppliers to encourage constant gains in quality and cost
- Turn your SRM strategy into a major competitive advantage
Supplier Relationship Management introduces and explains the Supplier Interaction Model, a key tool that will help you get the most from your supplier relationships. It segments the supplier universe into nine categories, from those you want to run away from fast to those so good and so useful to your organization that it can make sense to invest in them directly. Numerous case studies show how to apply the principles to your situation.
Supplier Relationship Management burns off the fog that has surrounded the procurement process for far too long. It is the definitive guide for business executives who want to get the maximum benefits from suppliers and gain very real advantages over competitors.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiv
Procurement Success vs. SRM Failure....Pages 1-6
Supplier Relationship Management....Pages 7-12
To SRM and Beyond!....Pages 13-26
Introducing Supplier Interaction Models....Pages 27-44
The โOrdinariesโ....Pages 45-62
โProblem Childrenโ....Pages 63-87
The โCritical Clusterโ....Pages 89-112
Putting Supplier Interaction Models to Work....Pages 113-141
The Role of IT in TrueSRM....Pages 143-155
The โDifferenceโ You Get from TrueSRM....Pages 157-169
Back Matter....Pages 171-174
โฆ Subjects
Business/Management Science, general
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<div></div><p>The supply base represents a wealth of opportunity that can bring significant value to an organizationโs brand value, competitive position and future security.<br><BR>This book discusses the process of Supplier Relationship Management (SRM) โ a discipline used to strategically plan and
There's a new buzz phrase in the air: Supplier Relationship Management (SRM). Corporate executives know it's necessary, but there's only one problem. Nobody yet knows how to do it. Or they think it's all about bashing your vendors over the head until they reduce the price another 4%. Supplier Relati
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Globalization, digitization, global supply chains and the Corona pandemic have led companies to take a closer look at value chains. Shifting services to partially competing supplier networks is giving rise to new guiding principles, strategies and processes. The focus in the future has therefore lon