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You are here: Home > Business > Business > The Principle(s) of Negative Value - A Procurement Article |
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Casual Articles - The Principle(s) of Negative Value - A Procurement Article
Opening a Dollar Store - Know and Learn From Your Competition , “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price.Are you considering the possibility of opening a dollar store? If so, then learn everything possible from your competitors. Spend a little time examining the competition before, during and after you conduct your grand opening event. Visit direct competitors as well as stores that will overlap with your store for customers.Learn what your direct competitors are doing. Start with competitors in the immediate area of your store. Then work your way away from your store in an ever-increasing area. Be sure to include well known and larger stores even if they are well away from your operation. These bigger players can have a huge impact on you when you are opening a dollar store.Find out about products that are carried, special promotions that might be going on, methods for displaying merchandise, as well as the general operation of their stores. How is their customer service? How do they treat customers at the checkout area? Is the store clean and well organized? Are there very many customers in the store? Look at everything that makes each competitor stronger. Look for things that make each competitor weaker. You will likely use this information when you Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded. Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything Fire Risk Assessment - It's The Law Some years ago while researching and writing a book on the subject of industrial Buyer & Sales relationships, I also wrote a follow up chapter for future endeavors which has rolled around in the back of my mind ever since. The piece was entitled “The Value of Value”.Any responsible person, even with limited formal instruction or experience, can do a simple fire risk assessment. More complex buildings will need to be assessed by a person with full training and experience in fire risk assessment.Mainly companies and building owners will be affected by the new legislation but it could be anyone who has some control over premises. Fire certificates will no longer be valid.Under the new regulations it is the responsibility of employers to do a risk assessment of their places of work, which must contain provisions concerning fire safety measures in the workplace.The responsible person must go over the risk assessment frequently to keep it current, particularly if: . There is reason to believe that it is no longer valid; or . There has been a major change in the matters to which it relates, or there have been expansions or substantial changes in the organisation of workThe risk assessment should be done to make sure that appropriate fire precautions, maintenance and management measures are in place to guarantee the safety of anyone who might use your premises.The Fire and Rescue Authority will now Alright, I admit it was and could still be, construed as something of a Procurement diatribe but the purpose both then and now is to assist venders recognize and comprehend how Buyers perceive and respond, to the levels of service we receive from distributors and manufacturers when there are problems. (Notice I didn’t say, “reps”) After 20 years of battling repetitive and inane situations and shortfalls, I thought it was time for someone to get it out into the open and talk about it plainly. Forget the graphs and the charts and Power Points, statistics and pep talks, just plain talk seemed like a reasonable solution. After all, how many Buyers and PA’s aren’t exhausted to the point of pending insanity, by suppliers not delivering on promises or being late, or shipping incomplete orders or failing to include documentation or … on and on and on? When I say “It’s a Tough World Out There…” (That’s the book title) I’m not just whistling “Dixie”. It’s a tough row to hoe on any given day in the land of industrial procurement no matter the industry, or the branch. Suppliers just don’t seem to get it sometimes. There comes a time when people just have to get nose to nose and hash things out. Was I justified in my disparagement? Are countless hours and countless dollars not spent needlessly across America re-doing what suppliers should automatically perform according to their quotations and PO deliverables? Daily … even hourly across this land industrial clients must repeatedly request and re-request Certificates of Compliance, MTR’s, Calibration Certificates, Proof of Shelf Life, Shipping Bills and on and on. It’s a fact. It’s no secret. It’s reality. It’s expensive. It’s aggravating. Anyway, in my old notes I think I labeled the problem as providing “negative value”. While suppliers regularly provide very good, in fact exceptional value in a myriad of ways on many other levels, (technical support, trouble shooting, rush deliveries and other hoop jumping exercises) the “negative values” tend to overshadow many of the positive values, simply due to their repetitiveness nature and needlessness. Enter human nature. Can it be overcome? Darned sure it can. So what is value and how is it measured? In their book, The Portable MBA in Marketing , Alexander Hiam and Charles D. Schew provide us with an equation which builds upon Professor Dick Berry’s study on the marketers role in the marketplace. Quite simply it is this: …”the price paid by the Buyer must be equal to or less than the total satisfaction obtainable from the bundle of benefits received. In other words Buyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it. And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price. Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded. Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything e Be Prepared - Get an Emergency and Disaster Kit charts and Power Points, statistics and pep talks, just plain talk seemed like a reasonable solution.When a disaster happens, failing to prepare is preparing to fail. Those that are prepared in advance with the correct supplies and action plan will inevitably be in a better position than those that do not. You should develop a unique action plan for each place that you and members of your family visit; this includes work, school, the gym and the homes of other members of your family.In the case of a disaster contacting other members of your family could be difficult. That is why you need to have a plan which will dictate where your family will meet in case of emergencies. As well as a place in your home, there should also be a place in your neighborhood in case there is any damage to your home or the circumstances mean that it is not possible to meet there.In an emergency it can be important to turn off your water, electricity and gas. As such, you should keep all tools such as spanners near there so that you can turn it off if need be. As well as making plans for members of your family, you also need to consider your pets too. When emergencies happen your immediate family members may not be able to help in giving information to doctors such as your b After all, how many Buyers and PA’s aren’t exhausted to the point of pending insanity, by suppliers not delivering on promises or being late, or shipping incomplete orders or failing to include documentation or … on and on and on? When I say “It’s a Tough World Out There…” (That’s the book title) I’m not just whistling “Dixie”. It’s a tough row to hoe on any given day in the land of industrial procurement no matter the industry, or the branch. Suppliers just don’t seem to get it sometimes. There comes a time when people just have to get nose to nose and hash things out. Was I justified in my disparagement? Are countless hours and countless dollars not spent needlessly across America re-doing what suppliers should automatically perform according to their quotations and PO deliverables? Daily … even hourly across this land industrial clients must repeatedly request and re-request Certificates of Compliance, MTR’s, Calibration Certificates, Proof of Shelf Life, Shipping Bills and on and on. It’s a fact. It’s no secret. It’s reality. It’s expensive. It’s aggravating. Anyway, in my old notes I think I labeled the problem as providing “negative value”. While suppliers regularly provide very good, in fact exceptional value in a myriad of ways on many other levels, (technical support, trouble shooting, rush deliveries and other hoop jumping exercises) the “negative values” tend to overshadow many of the positive values, simply due to their repetitiveness nature and needlessness. Enter human nature. Can it be overcome? Darned sure it can. So what is value and how is it measured? In their book, The Portable MBA in Marketing , Alexander Hiam and Charles D. Schew provide us with an equation which builds upon Professor Dick Berry’s study on the marketers role in the marketplace. Quite simply it is this: …”the price paid by the Buyer must be equal to or less than the total satisfaction obtainable from the bundle of benefits received. In other words Buyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it. And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price. Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded. Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything The Law of Attraction In Business y across America re-doing what suppliers should automatically perform according to their quotations and PO deliverables?Entrepreneurs work harder than most Americans. They spend countless hours and enormous amounts of energy trying to reach business and financial goals that are often elusive. They seem to be doing all the right things: attending seminars, scouring the latest business books, networking, guerilla marketing, hoping, and praying.We all know of business owners who go through the same motions yet they are far more successful and don't work nearly as hard. And, they seem to have more fun. Surely you've seen situations where two people are in the same business, sometimes within a block from each other. The owner of the first business can be successful beyond measure. The other business can be close to bankruptcy.What is the difference? The difference is that the first business owner is allowing their natural brilliance to run the business. That natural brilliance is the Law of Attraction. We are all far greater than we think and we have truly amazing potential that most people are not even aware of. The real key to success in life and in business is accessing your "miracle mind" and unleashing your capacity for abundance.The best way to do this is to lea Daily … even hourly across this land industrial clients must repeatedly request and re-request Certificates of Compliance, MTR’s, Calibration Certificates, Proof of Shelf Life, Shipping Bills and on and on. It’s a fact. It’s no secret. It’s reality. It’s expensive. It’s aggravating. Anyway, in my old notes I think I labeled the problem as providing “negative value”. While suppliers regularly provide very good, in fact exceptional value in a myriad of ways on many other levels, (technical support, trouble shooting, rush deliveries and other hoop jumping exercises) the “negative values” tend to overshadow many of the positive values, simply due to their repetitiveness nature and needlessness. Enter human nature. Can it be overcome? Darned sure it can. So what is value and how is it measured? In their book, The Portable MBA in Marketing , Alexander Hiam and Charles D. Schew provide us with an equation which builds upon Professor Dick Berry’s study on the marketers role in the marketplace. Quite simply it is this: …”the price paid by the Buyer must be equal to or less than the total satisfaction obtainable from the bundle of benefits received. In other words Buyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it. And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price. Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded. Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything Meditation Brings Business Renewal itiveness nature and needlessness. Enter human nature. Can it be overcome? Darned sure it can.As a seeker of solitude in my busy entrepreneurial workday, I use yoga, Pilates, a good old-fashioned run in the park, and anything else I can think of to calm my nerves and keep my head clear and focused. I have worked hard to keep my body fit and my business running smoothly. I have also found that the same principles used in the meditation practiced during yoga can be used to strengthen my business.While meditating during a yoga class several years ago, the instructor told us to feel that every movement is a new beginning. This made me think of my own business, which was just a fledgling startup at the time. In my day to day struggle as an entrepreneur, every project and each new contact could potentially take my business in a new direction. After making this connection, I knew that meditation had a lot to teach me about business. Since then, I’ve learned to apply some of the basic principles of meditation to my business and you can do it, too.Start employing meditation principles in your work life by viewing your business as a living being. Each direction the being goes in is, in fact, a new beginning. View this positively since life, just So what is value and how is it measured? In their book, The Portable MBA in Marketing , Alexander Hiam and Charles D. Schew provide us with an equation which builds upon Professor Dick Berry’s study on the marketers role in the marketplace. Quite simply it is this: …”the price paid by the Buyer must be equal to or less than the total satisfaction obtainable from the bundle of benefits received. In other words Buyers don’t want to pay more for any item than the satisfaction value they are going to achieve from purchasing it. And very simply put, “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price. Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded. Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything Drop Shipping - An Entrepreneur's Dream or a Fool's Nightmare? , “value” in marketing should consist of product, place, promotion, customer sensitivity, satisfaction and service which is all included in the price. You can then say that “value” is incorporated as a component of the price.For many people, the possibility of selling goods online appears fraught with difficulties. Firstly, you need to locate a product, store inventory, organise a good shipment or carrier company and so forth. But what if you could become a successful online retailer without having to worry about those problems?The answer is that you can…a simple type of retail called drop shipping. Let us take a look at the pros and cons of this method of retailing.Drop shipping is the name given to the retail method where you sell a product at a price of your choice but do not keep the products in stock. You collect the payment from the buyer and pass the order onto the supplier who despatches the goods on your behalf. You pay the wholesale price to the supplier and the difference between that and what you have been paid by the buyer is your profit.With this method of retailing, you are able to send low quantity orders gathered through your website to wholesalers without the worry of packaging and despatch. You manage the promotion of the product and collect payment and the drop shipper looks after the rest.However, there are some rules you need to be aware Even from a procurement standard, if we are talking about measurable value(s) we cannot look at a sale as simply a “sale” or a purchase. We also have to look at the transaction as a “bundle”. Real value is rarely measured and less frequently examined and recorded. Most Buyers and P/A’s don’t have the time for examining ”bundles”. They need a product, they request a quote and they purchase whatever the requisition calls for at the lowest price. As Purchasers we crunch (and report on) the obvious which is the sticker price. Few of us have time for anything else. Remember Oscar Wilde? In his short life span he learned a lot or at least observed what many do not. He was the one who opined, “What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Are we all cynics then? I can think of at least two quick reasons why Buyers may have become cynical in today’s purchasing environment. (1) Buyers are overworked and undervalued (2) Buyers are becoming increasingly bound to software programs and routines where the single benefactor in the company is the Accounting Department. They rarely have time either to examine nor calculate the real costs of acquisition. Neither can they take steps to counteract the problem. How can Buyers talk about value when procedurally, professionally and psychologically they have been conditioned to and driven to focus almost entirely on price? Even though they have heard and even learned that the bundle, or the total transaction cost is the real story, both lateral and pressures from outside and managerial sources foster and encourage the “sticker price” mentality because “price” is what is most often measured. I’ll say it again. In most organizations, the PO price is what is measured. Should Buyers be cynical? How can they not be? Here is a common example. Customer A purchases one million dollars of product from Supplier B annually. Supplier B has performance problems which the Buyer at Customer A calculates at 30% “negative value”. In other words, of the one thousand business transactions conducted between Customer A and Supplier B in one year, over three hundred problems occur within that “bundle” of deliverables per year. That’s about one per day. Either the Certs are missing or the order is short shipped or the order is late or the order arrives damaged or the material is in non conformance or the material has an expired shelf life or the material doesn’t meet spec or the product isn’t according to the drawing …. On and on but you get the point. The cost per Purchase order as calculated by the industry or the company is we’ll say $200.00 per order. The administrative cost alone to re-contact the supplier, source and identify the problem and then rectify the issue, be it returning the goods, accepting the material with a deviation, revising the price, quarantining the material, or expediting the order, whatever the case may be, has just driven up the actual transaction cost by at least $100.00 possibly to $300.00. The Buyer has actually brought added value into the transaction by his/her due diligence by resolving the issue. The supplier has contributed an equal amount of “negative value.” So my question is, “who is tracking this “negative value” and who is tracking this “positive value’” By the Buyer identifying, confirming and then resolving the problem, the actual composite price has just skyrocketed, yet the only measurement being taken is again, the purchase sticker price written on the PO. This is neither fair to the Buyer nor to your vender base. “Hold on”, you say. “The vender should be sent packing….”
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