Managing Your Supplier Relationships
When effective, there's opportunity.
By Gary T. Moore
Gases and welding distributors are classic “middlemen.” Distributors have always had a tendency to establish relationships with suppliers, then focus most of their attention and resources on customers. However, a changing landscape
is demanding that distributors refocus on supplier relationshipsand
develop a strategy to manage those relationships, instead of just letting
them happen.
What's Changing
In a globalized world, change is frequent and fast. Changes affecting
distributors include:
- Consolidation of customers, demanding more national and global purchasing
agreements.
- Consolidation of suppliers, affecting distributor alliances and contracts.
- Seeming depersonalization of communication between all
players in the supply chain, including distributor-supplier communication.
- Changing fortunes of suppliers and customers that can result in unpleasant
surprises. Losing a major customer is bad. Losing a major supplier,
or having their performance capability significantly diminished, can
be catastrophic.
- Supplier management with little or no distribution experience or appreciation
of the importance and challenges of distributors, resulting in poorly
thought-out policies having negative effects on distributors.
- Rapid turnover of top management at suppliers.
- Transfer of traditional supplier responsibilities to distributors,
i.e., inventory availability, freight management, marketing.
Any of these changes can quickly, adversely affect distributor operations
and even survival. On the other hand, effective management of supplier
relationships can open up significant opportunities.
Objectives of Supplier Relationship Management
It is important for distributors to establish objectives and then a plan
to meet these objectives. Objectives for supplier relationship management
include:
- Staying informed on key issues regarding suppliers, including their
financial health, capabilities, customer service performance, assessment
of your company, their product, business and distribution policies.
- Influencing supplier distribution policies such as pricing, discounts,
allowances, freight, channel choices and exclusivity.
- Leveraging supplier programs for maximum effectiveness for your company.
- Supplying meaningful feedback to suppliers regarding their performance,
actions affecting distributor's customers and company, trends in the
marketplace and new ideas. In other words, distributors are suppliers'
eyes and ears on the street, influencing their actions in a positive
way.
- Attracting appropriate opportunities to a distributor's company, like
new product lines and more geography.
- Being aware of actions of competitive suppliers, including availability
of more attractive suppliers for your area of operation.
- Having a fall back position should something negative
happen at a key supplier.
Supplier Relationship ManagementWhose
Responsibility?
Supplier relationship management is the responsibility of distributor
top management, including the dealer principal. Building and leveraging
supplier relationships to enhance a distributor's effectiveness and survival
must be top-down driven. The key personal relationships are at the top.
Others who must be involved include sales and marketing executives, operations
management and, increasingly, information technology (IT) managers.
Where to Start?
One starting place is a meeting (possibly incorporated into the distributor's
yearly planning cycle), facilitated by distributor top management, to
focus on the issue, establish objectives and assess the situation with
current suppliers. A first step is to understand that all suppliers
are not created equal. Primary initial focus should be on relationships
with your most important A suppliers. These are the suppliers
which, if they disappeared tomorrow, would threaten the existence of your
company. Some distributors have only one A supplier; others
have more. Then identify the B supplierssignificant,
but not life-threatening. All others are...well, just others.
After discussions about the importance of supplier relationship management
and identification of A and B suppliers, objectives
should be formulated using the list on the previous pages as one guide.
The next step is to assess recent and current actions and relationships
with A and, as appropriate, B suppliers.
Develop an action plan to meet objectives with specific responsibilities,
timelines and, most important, feedback mechanisms.
Your real strength lies in excelling in your
market. If something happens with an A supplier, you'll
be in a position to attract another A.
|
How Are We Doing?
The most basic step in supplier relationship management is Do your
job. The real strength of distributors lies in excelling in your
market. Then, even if something happens with an A supplier,
you'll be in a position to attract another A. It's also important
for distributors to be perceived by their A suppliers as doing
a good job.
Almost all suppliers have distributor evaluation mechanisms (formal or
informal). Supplier evaluation parameters for distributors often include:
sales volume and growth, sales mix (selling their more profitable products),
prompt payment, market share, participation in programs, customer development
and customer service of national accounts. Distributors need to understand
their key suppliers' distributor evaluation system in detail, and then
know how they are rated in that system. One way to do this is to ask them:
What is your distributor evaluation system, and how do we stack
up? Supplier perception of your company can be tested by your management
team asking supplier visitors to your company questions like the following:
- How are we perceived by your company?
- What are your more successful distributors doing that we aren't doing?
- Where are we falling short of your expectations?
Of course, answers should be fed back to distribution top management
and your supplier management team. Not meeting supplier expectations can
trigger improvement efforts on the distributor's part, discussions with
top supplier management to get the story out better, requests for help
from the supplier or, in extreme cases, seeking out alternative suppliers
more in tune with your company's strategies and way of doing business.
Actions to Manage Supplier Relationships
Schedule top planning meetings yearly or bi-annually with supplier top
management. Distributors may need to initiate these meetings. If possible,
the location should alternate between the supplier headquarters and the
distributorship. The agenda should include mutual evaluation, review of
key supplier programs and distributor strategies and plans, feedback about
the market trends and customer actions. There should be a previously established,
mutually agreed-upon agenda.
Listen carefully to everything your suppliers say, particularly when
it's specifically about your company. Take it seriously.
All suppliers are not created equal. Primary
focus should be on relationships with your most important A
suppliers.
|
Disseminate performance reports provided by suppliers to key distributor
managers. Get their reaction. If your view of your company performance
is significantly different from your suppliers' view or there are extenuating
circumstances, respond to their reports formally.
Admit the need for help and ask for it when you are falling short of
agreed-upon performance expectations in specific areas.
Initiate intentional outreach by top distributor management to top management
of suppliers. Get to know them personally. Play golf. Share meals. Go
visit them. Invite them to visit your company. Share jokes. Ask about
their families. Exchange letters, e-mails, etc. Blast through the impersonal
e-mail, voicemail and gatekeeper systems. Personal relationships
matter.
Let supplier management know if you are looking for more territory or
product lines.
Participate in distributor councilsgive positive as well as negative
feedback. Don't be perceived as a constant whiner.
Encourage suppliers to hire some management with distribution experience
(not from your company, of course!).
Encourage peer-to-peer personal relationships between distributor and
supplier management and some key operations interface personnel. Expect
it of your people.
Participate in supplier special programs, sometimes even when you don't
want to. Show up (or have appropriate representation) at meetings called
by your suppliers.
Pay special attention to supplier-distributor IT issues. Supplier requirements
are growing and are increasingly difficult and expensive to meet. But
they are critical to the relationship. Be sure your voice is heard at
the supplier about proposed IT changes.
Be active in industry associations. Go to conventions and meetings. These
provide opportunities to build personal relationships with suppliers and
opportunities to talk with other distributors about common and competitive
suppliers.
Seek out opportunities to meet and get to know key people at competitive
suppliers. Again, industry conventions and conferences provide this opportunity.
Have conversations with fellow distributors about common suppliers. Get
other perspectives as to what's going on.
Seek ways to give your distributorship industry visibility. Write articles
for supplier and industry publications, make presentations, send press
releases on positive things happening at your company, send unsolicited
letters and e-mails. This can be particularly important for distributors
in small markets who need to stay visible with suppliers.
Establish criteria and rate your suppliers internally (confidentially,
as appropriate).
Create supplier awards. Establish criteria, publicize them, invite top
supplier management to town to receive the awards in a positive forum.
Publicize the awards in industry publications. These get attention.
Consistently review public sources of information about current, competitive
and potential suppliers. Read annual reports, industry publications. Get
D&B reports on your suppliers. Subscribe to www.hoovers.com.
Create a professional atmosphere about suppliers within your company.
If negative attitudes develop about a certain supplier, investigate the
reasons, but don't let casual language (which always gets back to suppliers)
turn unprofessionally negative. Don't bad mouth suppliers.
Visit other distributors and discuss suppliers, while also benchmarking
best practices.
As appropriate, create buying groups, strategic alliances or other associations
of related distributors. Objective: clout.
Driving the Process
As the world becomes smaller and change accelerates, it is increasingly
important for distributors to actively manage their supplier relationshipsparticularly
the relationships with A suppliers. It should be a strategic,
planned, monitored activity involving all distributor management, driven
by distributor ownership or top management. Out of this process, gases and welding distributors have a better chance of managing change rather than just reacting. Like all relationships, supplier-distributor relationships take work!
|