The role of professional procurement

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The role of professional procurement

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To discuss trends in procurement in UK healthcare ... 'Locum doctors for sales in e-auctions' Only suitable for tactical purchases? Station Break ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The role of professional procurement


1
The role of professional procurement
  • PSMG
  • 15th July 2008
  • Beth Rogers
  • Author Rethinking sales management

2
Objectives
  • 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

3
Illert and Emmerich, 2008
4
Power play
  • Common interest
  • Improving the patients quality of life
  • Conflict
  • How much should it cost?

5
Trends 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

6
Station break
  • What trends are you encountering
  • Secondary care?
  • Primary care?

7
Purchasing professionalism
8
The 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?)

9
Purchasing 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
10
Distinction between supplier management and
contract management
11
Influencing 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.
12
Station break
  • How can pharmaceutical companies help procurement
    professionals to manage risk?

13
Strategic decision-making
Leverage
Strategic
Importance of purchase (profit impact)
Bottleneck
Non-critical
Kraljic 1984
Complexity/risk in supply market
14
Buying 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)

15
A 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

16
Station break
  • Which of your brands fit in which box?
  • How might that affect the way you sell them?

17
And who else is involved?
18
Organisational buying roles
  • 7 roles within decision-making units
  • initiators
  • users
  • influencers
  • deciders
  • buyers
  • Gatekeepers
  • Control access
  • Standards approval

Who might play what role?
19
Purchasing 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

20
NHS
  • Consultants PWC advocate balance of power
    between
  • Dept of Health
  • Primary Care Trusts
  • Procurement
  • Patient
  • ..and provider

21
Station Break
  • Which stakeholders should get what, in terms of
    sales resource?

22
Centralisation
23
The local/central dilemma
Current trend towards centralisation? E.g.
polyclinics
24
Findings 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
25
New types of contract
26
Big picture
  • Core national framework contracts
  • Some local tailoring
  • Some element of payment by results
  • Janssen Cilag and cancer drug

27
Supplier performancemanagement
Relationship, reputation
Service and support
Price Quality Delivery
EODB
28
NHS
  • 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?

29
Buying outsourcinge.g. disease management
  • Strategic or tactical?
  • Innovation or operations?
  • Relationship development
  • Relationship maintenance

30
Station Break
  • In the strategic box, what could we do for
    buying organisations to reduce hassle?

31
E-procurement
32
Drivers
  • Price reduction
  • Process cost reduction
  • IT capabilities
  • Need for speedy communications
  • Control over processes
  • Need for speedy supply chain

33
Reverse 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
34
Growing 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?

35
Station Break
  • E-procurement under what conditions should we
    play the purchasers game?

36
Key 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

37
Things 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

38
Thank you!
  • Contact details
  • Beth Rogers
  • Programme Manager Sales Management
  • Portsmouth Business School
  • Beth.rogers_at_port.ac.uk
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