Thoughts and strategies for running a purchasing cooperative or buying group

Tag: software

Successfully Adopting Electronic Ordering within a Purchasing Cooperative

Purchasing cooperatives struggle with moving from a decentralized or paper-based ordering network to a centralized electronic ordering platform. Even though electronic ordering benefits everyone in the buying group’s supply chain, numerous road blocks seem to deter groups from moving forward.

Why Electronic Ordering?

Electronic ordering (or e-ordering), if done correctly, can provide buying groups with valuable purchasing data that can be used to strengthen the coop through:

·        Meaningful preferred vendor programs

·        Improved rebate negotiations

·        Knowledge of member performance and trends

·        Ability to forecast rebate earnings

·        Additional value-added shared services to members

·        Improved relationships with suppliers

E-Ordering Strategy

A successful e-ordering strategy includes:

·        adopting a flexible methodology that makes it easy for members with different capabilities to participate

·        providing carrots for both member and supplier participation

·        setting realistic adoption goals

·        committing to provide feedback to both members and suppliers on an on-going basis of the results of the program.

Flexible Methodology

It’s a fact of life of buying groups that when it comes to technology, members have their own comfort zones, capabilities, and preferred way of doing things. Unless your members are strongly motivated to adopt e-ordering, attempts to impose a single way of doing things will fail.

There are three broad forms of e-ordering:

·        A web-based ordering system where members manually key orders into an online catalogue

·        Capturing orders generated from members’ ERP systems

·        Converting other manual order mediums, such as emails, faxes, or spreadsheets, into an electronic (EDI) format

Each of these approaches have pros and cons, and no single approach will appeal to all of your members. However, by providing all of these options (or as many as possible), you will ensure that the maximum number of members participate. 

Online Catalogues

An online catalogue is simply a web-based tool for members to view the product available from a supplier and manually key in orders.

This approach requires the most effort from your group, your suppliers, and your members. As a purchasing cooperative, you will need to work with your suppliers to provide product information in a format you can publish into a web-catalogue. Ideally this product information will include product images, rich descriptions, and relevant cost information. Where possible, the task of putting this information together should be pushed to the suppliers themselves, but your purchasing cooperative should be prepared to step in where needed.

Members will have to be willing to visit the group’s web catalogue and manually key in orders. If they are accustomed to keying in orders into their supplier web sites, this will not be a difficult transition. However, if the member is used to generating purchase orders directly from their ERP systems, then convincing them to re-key their orders will be an uphill battle.

One advantage of managing online catalogues is that you will have a rich repository of product data that can be used in analytics as well as member e-commerce. The other advantage is that there are no costs for the member to participate.

Capturing Member Orders

A far less labour-intensive approach to e-ordering is to allow members to enter purchase orders into their existing ERP software, as they are already doing, and then provide a way to access those orders electronically.

The most common approach is to provide integrations into the various ERP systems used by your members. Such integrations result in either a file exported that can be transmitted and mapped as an EDI file, or a direct API integration into your ordering platform.

Some online catalogue providers also have the ability to accept “punch outs” from various systems. With a punch out, the member can view the catalogue and place orders while staying within their own software platforms. This style of e-ordering is most common with larger systems such as Oracle or J.D. Edwards.

The benefit of this approach is that it is built upon your members’ existing ordering process and eliminates any need for re-keying. The downside is that there is usually a cost involved for the member to create the integration and on an ongoing basis for transmitting orders. Groups can help reduce these costs by funding ERP integrations on behalf of their members and by negotiating a group rate for the EDI traffic.

Other Mediums

Depending on your provider, it is also possible to capture purchase orders in other formats and convert them into EDI files.

If your members regularly email or fax their orders, some providers have tools to capture those transmissions and convert the PDF attachment or fax into usable data that can be translated into an EDI file. This practice, unfortunately, tends to be less accurate than traditional EDI methods and may result in an increased number of failed orders.

Members may also create orders in Excel spreadsheets or other file formats. As long as the format is consistent from order to order, these files can be mapped into traditional EDI files. This process is highly accurate and provides a very reliable form of electronic ordering. The downside is there will likely be an additional cost to the member for translation maps.

Carrots

For an e-ordering initiative to be successful, it is important to have buy-in from your members and suppliers. The first step in achieving this buy-in is to communicate very clearly why you are adopting e-ordering and what the benefits are for everyone participating.

Carrots for Members

Members will benefit from added efficiencies, improved customer service, and increased cost savings.

The added efficiencies enjoyed by your members will vary based on how they are currently placing orders and how they will be sending e-orders. In environments where members have to visit each individual supplier’s web site, remember a username and password, and login to key in an order, having a single, group-sponsored online catalogue for every supplier will be very appealing to members.

Online catalogues also open up the opportunity for providing product information to members to fuel their POS, ERP, and e-commerce solutions. Product data is gold, and its value to members should not be underestimated.

In environments where orders can be created and transmitted directly from their ERP systems as part of their normal ordering process, maximum efficiency is gained. There is no re-keying as purchase orders are created automatically.

Members with the ability to already generate EDI orders from their ERP systems may have already launched their own e-ordering campaign. These efforts by individual members are generally time consuming and expensive, usually resulting in only a handful of suppliers being onboarded. A group-initiated e-ordering campaign eliminates these duplicated efforts among members, and result in a much higher level of supplier participation at far less cost and effort for each member.

Electronic ordering typically includes electronic acknowledgements and advance shipping notices. This will provide your members with timely information about out of stocks, back orders, product substitutions and shipping dates that can be vital when dealing with trade customers.

Finally, e-ordering can be used to negotiate increased rebates or discounts from your suppliers. E-ordering will save your suppliers money and will generally increase their sales. This can be used as a basis for negotiating additional rebates that can be passed along to your members. These rebates will sometimes cover any EDI costs the member may incur.

Carrots for Suppliers

Suppliers enjoy many cost savings and revenue generating opportunities when orders are placed electronically.

Electronic orders are fed directly into their ERP systems without the need for human processing. Their automatic processes are able to take the order, acknowledge it, fulfill it, and invoice it far more efficiently than if it arrived by other means.

Combining e-ordering with e-invoicing will provide further incentives for suppliers to participate. Studies show that e-invoicing greatly reduces the time to pay, putting money in your suppliers’ pockets sooner.

Offering a central billing program for some or all of your suppliers will also make them more eager to participate. If your group is paying invoices on behalf of your members, your suppliers will feel more confident of prompt payment. A single payer also streamlines their payment processes. With e-ordering and the right software tools, you will have visibility of what your members are ordering and be able to control any credit risks associated with central billing. The benefits of central billing to your suppliers will often cause them to provide you with better terms discounts which can introduce further savings for your members or generate revenue for your group.

Onboarding

Onboarding suppliers onto an electronic ordering platform is as much an art as it is a science. Treat it as you would any other major group initiative – talk about it in all your communications, measure it, and build a marketing initiative around it.

Tackle your low-hanging fruit first. Identify your suppliers who already support e-ordering and who are eager to participate. Early wins will help build confidence in the program and build momentum.

Next focus on your bigger suppliers, the ones with the greatest purchase volume from your group. They have the most to gain and will provide the biggest benefit to your members.

On the member-side, identify the most common ERP systems in use by your members and work to create integrations with them. Recruit members who will act as champions for your campaign and will be willing to talk with suppliers and other members.

If you will be creating online catalogues, make sure you have adequate staff in place. No matter how good your catalogue tools are, you will need staff to maintain products and catalogues on an on-going basis.

Set realistic goals and timelines for the number of suppliers and members participating in the program. It is unrealistic to expect 100% participation. Decide what numbers make sense for you.

Reporting

Once your e-ordering platform is up and running, continue to follow up on it. Continue to add suppliers to the platform. If possible, encourage your members to place orders for non-group suppliers as well so that you can capture data about those purchases.

Run reports every quarter, showing member purchases from suppliers and provide this feedback to your trading partners. Historically, purchases from suppliers who participate in e-ordering will increase over time. It is good practice to show this trend to your suppliers.

You can also use purchase data when evaluating your preferred vendor programs as well as tracking your members’ participation in your programs. Access to line item information may also help you when considering container buys or white label product lines.

Solution Providers

Moving to an e-ordering platform requires a knowledgeable partner who understands the uniqueness of the buying group model, has the appropriate software tools, and has experience building an EDI exchange within a supply chain.

Can You Afford Free Software?

Purchasing Cooperatives

Purchasing cooperatives are masters at piecing together a hodge-podge of free software tools to help them do their jobs. Need to do a mass mailing? Use Mailchimp. Need to collaborate across different home offices? There’s Google Docs. Need to make a conference call? Use UberConference.
SurveyMonkey, Doodle, HootSuite, Trello, Prezi… There’s lots of great free software out there. For buying groups with a limited operational budget and a high need to simply get the job done, these tools seem like a life saver.

But as a purchasing cooperative you have a unique responsibility when it comes to recommending free software to your members.

Nothing is Free

We all know that there is no such thing as “free as a business model”. So how do the creators of free software hope to make their money? Well, there are two models driving free software.

Advertising as a Business Model

The first model is “advertising as a business model”. By this, I don’t mean displaying ads on the page in hopes that you’ll click them. The return rate on this type of advertising is so small (fractions of a penny per click) that the site has to be as popular as Facebook or YouTube to be profitable.

By advertising as a business model, I mean the creator of the software is offering free use of the software in hopes that you will buy something else. That something else may be a paid version of the software with increased functionality, or it may be a completely different service or product.

On its own, as long as everyone is honest and up-front, this model is relatively benign. The downsides for you as a buying group include:

  • The software may not include all the functionality you need.
  • There’s no support for the software if you have questions or problems.
  • Because the software is a marketing device and not an end-product, it may not be updated with new features as often as you would like, and it becomes stagnant over time.
  • If the company is not successful with its primary line of revenue, the software may disappear or may be converted into pay-per-use.

Surveillance as a Business Model

The second model is “surveillance as a business model”. In this model, the creator of the software reserves the right to sell any private information it gains from you for commercial purposes.

In our personal lives, we’ve all grown accustomed to giving away private data. But as a purchasing cooperative the data you are giving away doesn’t belong to you.

It belongs to your members.

Whenever you use free software in your purchasing cooperative, you need to ask yourself whether you are giving away information that your members consider private. Are you putting your members’ sales, order, or customer data in someone else’s hands? It is hard enough to be an independent business these days without having the details of your business sold to your competitors.

The challenge is that there is no way of truly knowing if the company providing your free software is selling your information. Most terms of agreements contain vague clauses that would allow your data to be sold. Terms of agreements and licenses also change over time, often without you knowing it. Even if the founders of a company are adamant that they will not sell your data, the third party investors that fund the company may have other plans.

And remember, the two business models are not exclusive. In most cases, both are being used. And if they aren’t now, they will be in the future.

When is it OK to use Free Software?

I still use free software at work, with the following guidelines. I only use free software if:

  • It is not mission critical. Any task that is truly important to my company’s success is paid for.
  • It doesn’t involve sensitive data. That survey I send out once a year? I’d be fine if that information got out. My new product specifications? I’ll keep those off of Google Docs, thank you.
  • It’s not a task I do every day. I edit sound files a couple times a year for marketing projects. Audacity works great for that. I’m work with spreadsheets every day – I’m going to pay for Excel.
  • It’s not something that I will need help doing. LinkedIn is pretty simple. I’m not going to have to phone someone for help.

Most importantly, I’m not going to rely on free software for anything that may affect my customers. At that point, free would be too expensive.

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