Title: The role of professional procurement
1The role of professional procurement
- PSMG
- 15th July 2008
- Beth Rogers
- Author Rethinking sales management
2Objectives
- To discuss trends in procurement in UK healthcare
- To gain an understanding of the purchasing
profession - To explore the impact of procurement changes on
selling
3Illert and Emmerich, 2008
4Power play
- Common interest
- Improving the patients quality of life
- Conflict
- How much should it cost?
5Trends in healthcare procurement
- Procurement professionals are seen as key
business advisors in the NHS - Virtually all procurement specialists in the NHS
are vocationally and/or academically qualified - Use of purchasing agencies
- Emergence of specialist procurement per product
type - Increasing centralisation of purchasing activity
- New contracts focus on outcomes rather than
activities - Use of e-procurement
- Professional practice managers in PCTs
6Station break
- What trends are you encountering
- Secondary care?
- Primary care?
7Purchasing professionalism
8The role of purchasing
- Professionalism in purchasing, with its ongoing
external trading relationships, is key to
supporting and/or enhancing the brand sometimes
this can be the only differentiating factor
between companies. - CIPS Chartered Institute of Purchasing and
Supply - (in healthcare, can we substitute reputation
for brand?)
9Purchasing manager role
- Purchasing and supply chain strategy
- Strategic sourcing analysis
- Managing risk
- Proactive demand management
- Pre-contract
- Identification of need, seek suppliers, evaluate
suppliers, negotiate contract - Post-contract
- Relationship management
www.cips.org
10Distinction between supplier management and
contract management
11Influencing factors
- External
- Government policy
- Patient or pressure group perceptions
- Media reaction
- Internal
- Organisational culture
- Professional
- Technical effectiveness
- Financial viability
- Quality of support/delivery/service
- Business relationship
- Personal
- How does this purchase affect my career?
Risk cannot be eliminated. Attempts to do so just
move the risk. Known risks are easier to manage.
12Station break
- How can pharmaceutical companies help procurement
professionals to manage risk?
13Strategic decision-making
Leverage
Strategic
Importance of purchase (profit impact)
Bottleneck
Non-critical
Kraljic 1984
Complexity/risk in supply market
14Buying situations/Buyclasses
- 3 types of decision
- straight rebuy
- routinised, response behaviour
- modified rebuy
- limited problem solving
- new task
- extended problem solving
- A new task, and sometimes a modified rebuy,
requires wider participation in the buying
process - Perhaps including external expertise
- (Robinson,1987)
15A strategic response
- Dow Corning (chemicals/silicones)
- Spun off e-business subsidiary Xiameter in 2002
- Bulk orders of commodity products online
- Process efficient, cost efficient
- No human intervention!
- Account managers focused on strategic business
16Station break
- Which of your brands fit in which box?
- How might that affect the way you sell them?
17And who else is involved?
18Organisational buying roles
- 7 roles within decision-making units
- initiators
- users
- influencers
- deciders
- buyers
- Gatekeepers
- Control access
- Standards approval
Who might play what role?
19Purchasing consultants
- Usually highly qualified and able to apply best
practice standards - High probability that they have been engaged to
reduce price - Risk shifting may be an issue
- Claim to reduce risks for clients
- May create other risks
20NHS
- Consultants PWC advocate balance of power
between - Dept of Health
- Primary Care Trusts
- Procurement
- Patient
- ..and provider
21Station Break
- Which stakeholders should get what, in terms of
sales resource?
22Centralisation
23The local/central dilemma
Current trend towards centralisation? E.g.
polyclinics
24Findings in USA
- Group purchasing voluntary
- Hospitals join groups to achieve best price
- But there are still concerns about who gets what
- Success dependent on
- Commitment to excellence in purchasing practice
- Recognising the importance of relationships with
clinical suppliers - Integrating business and clinical interests
- Highest skills levels in process
- Staff committed to optimises resources to achieve
organisational goals
Schneller, 2000
25New types of contract
26Big picture
- Core national framework contracts
- Some local tailoring
- Some element of payment by results
- Janssen Cilag and cancer drug
27Supplier performancemanagement
Relationship, reputation
Service and support
Price Quality Delivery
EODB
28NHS
- Price (always)
- Quality / delivery
- Payment terms linked to outcomes
- Patient choice (but not universally applied)
- Service/ support
- Importance of consistency
- Feedback system / measurement
- Relationships?
- Reducing number of suppliers used
- Encouragement of UK SMEs?
- Role for Innovation?
- Centre for Evidence-based Purchasing
- New (less hassle) models?
29Buying outsourcinge.g. disease management
- Strategic or tactical?
- Innovation or operations?
- Relationship development
- Relationship maintenance
30Station Break
- In the strategic box, what could we do for
buying organisations to reduce hassle?
31E-procurement
32Drivers
- Price reduction
- Process cost reduction
- IT capabilities
- Need for speedy communications
- Control over processes
- Need for speedy supply chain
33Reverse auctions
- Rely on four pre-conditions
- Commodity specifications, e.g. ISO standards
- Large quantities
- Sufficient number of suppliers in the market
- Correct conditions in buying organisation
skills, processes
Smeltzer and Carr 2003
34Growing concerns about reverse auctions
- Supplier exploitation
- Poor specifications
- Erosion of trust
- Media interest
- Locum doctors for sales in e-auctions
- Only suitable for tactical purchases?
35Station Break
- E-procurement under what conditions should we
play the purchasers game?
36Key learning
- The purchasing profession plays an increasingly
significant role in supplier selection - They own sourcing strategy and the sourcing
process - They determine to a large degree how successful
our sales effort can be
37Things to think about
- Allocating scarce resource
- Highly skilled account managers and expert teams
to strategic opportunities - Cheapest process for commodity brands
- Boundary spanning
- Designing solutions from the customer point of
view - Creativity
- Future scenarios for healthcare buying
38Thank you!
- Contact details
- Beth Rogers
- Programme Manager Sales Management
- Portsmouth Business School
- Beth.rogers_at_port.ac.uk