| The sourcing principles followed
by many apparel organisations seem to be governed by apathy.
Once supply relationships have been defined, it often becomes
a struggle to change them. Yet keeping the supply base refreshed
is probably one of the single most important functions that
a buyer can perform explains Devangshu Dutta.
For many decades from the early 1900s onwards, retailers followed
a 'trader' or 'merchant' model, largely buying from those suppliers
who could provide the best prices. Of course other parameters
were considered as well, such as desirability of the product,
but price was the major driver. It was also rare for retailers
to go out to look for suppliers - suppliers normally turned
up at the merchant's doors to sell their wares.
There was little, if any, strategy to selecting the 'supply
base'. Retailers were much too busy building their presence
in the market, opening new stores, acquiring new markets, growing
their product offer; in short, concentrating on the business
of selling to consumers. International trade existed, as it
has since the dawn of history, but was led by traders. Retailers,
by and large, followed the domestic sourcing route.
The retailer goes abroad
The 1950s were driven by the need to rebuild war-shattered economies
through trade and economic cooperation. Bi-lateral, and later
multi-lateral, trade agreements were brought into force. An
awareness of other countries around the world was also brought
into sharp focus through two successive world wars, particularly
the second. Retailers began to explore supply bases outside
their home countries, and from the 1960s to the 1990s this international
trade grew by leaps and bounds. Naturally, as the pioneers went
overseas, so did their competitors - it is very hard to compete
profitably, when your rivals are buying comparable merchandise
at much cheaper prices.
As a result, by the early 90s the supply base of any
large retailer in the major consuming markets would take in
more than 30-35 countries from which products might be sourced.
And as the number of supply countries grew, so too did the number
of suppliers. It would not be unusual for 500-1000 suppliers
to be dealing with a single retailer.
Consolidation, conservation and conservatism
Retailers such as Wal-Mart in the USA, M&S in the UK, Carrefour
in France and many others have had preferred suppliers who grew
along with them. These suppliers were typically based in the
home country of the retailer, and set up production units or
sourcing organisations overseas from where they could supply
goods to their customer at a competitive price. In some cases,
their sourcing strategies were driven by their own analyses;
in others the retailer led the way (such as M&S or Wal-Mart
identifying the next preferred supply country).
In the 1990s a scientific sourcing principle began to be applied.
It was good to cut down supplier numbers, since this reduced
the management effort on the part of the buyer to constantly
look for new suppliers and maintain current relationships. Terms
such as 'key', 'preferred' or 'strategic' supplier came into
vogue.
As an example, witness the dramatic supply base reduction
undertaken by most large retailers in the UK. Some organisations
even looked to supermarkets to understand and apply their supply
base management principles, where product categories were dominated
by, or completely split up between, less than four suppliers.
In a few cases, it reached such extremes that one supplier virtually
controlled a retailer's entire product lines.
Some organisations even quantified the cost of moving into
new supply countries in an attempt to understand whether it
was worthwhile and how best to shape their sourcing strategy.
At the end of the 90s and into 2000, however, there seem to
be rumblings among retailers about the need for some more diversity
in their supply bases. Statements such as "we are uncomfortable
with our overexposure to country X", or "I wish I could manage
to meet some more suppliers to get a feel for what is happening
out there in the marketplace - otherwise our range ends up looking
like everyone else's", or even, "sometimes we feel we miss out
on innovative factories because we are so deeply bound with
our existing supply base", reflect the general consensus.
So, the question is, has supply base consolidation been taken
too far?
Time for a new deal
The first step should be to acknowledge that the business of
retailing needs a healthy balance between predictability and
innovation. Predictability, as much as is possible in sourcing,
could be represented by relationships with known and trusted
suppliers. It would take a very strong individual, and a very
large safety net, to work every season with large numbers of
unknown, new suppliers. It would also require a lot of management
time and effort to keep educating new suppliers about the business
and its needs.
However, equally, it must be acknowledged that the fashion
business is not like automobile or aircraft businesses where
practically the entire market and supply base is known.
Nor is it as expensive to develop new products or product
components. In the automotive industry new models cost hundreds
of millions of dollars to develop - and with such high stakes,
buyers tend to select their suppliers carefully and, once the
relationship is established, stick to the relationship for a
fairly long period of time, with both parties investing resources
in it for mutual long-term gain.
In the fashion industry, on the other hand, most product development
investment does not exceed a few thousand dollars. This is well
within the capability of not only the largest preferred suppliers
of the large retailers, but most of the supply base around the
world. Whether design-led or technology-led, new products and
new looks are constantly being created. Similarly, innovative
business practices that generate more responsive factories,
improve quality or reduce costs, are not the sole domain of
large, old and established companies.
The two critical areas that need to be addressed by
any retailer are:
- A focus on cost/margin/profitability management:
how can we make the management of sourcing more
efficient in terms of effort and cost?
- An eye towards innovation and risk-management:
how can we tap into new suppliers without expending too much
effort in development only to find that the relationship does
not work out?
There are many answers to these questions. One of them, which
provides a structure or framework in which to work, is the link
between product-type and sourcing strategy.
In this, as a first step, a buyer must make a mental division
between 'largely predictable' products and 'fashion' products.
Largely predictable products include not only basic or staple
items, such as the three-pack of underwear or a $150 suit, but
also seasonal items (such as swimwear) for which sales vary
dramatically from summer to winter but follow a rhythmic pattern,
with some variation, over the same season from year-to-year.
For one company such predictable products might be 80 per cent
of the business, while for another it might be no more than
20-40 per cent of the entire range.
For such products, supply base hopping is almost certainly
the wrong strategy to follow. The sensible strategy would be
to concentrate energy on developing relationships with certain
key supply bases and suppliers who provide a long-term sustainability
or constant improvement in terms of cost, quality and other
performance parameters.
On the other hand, there are other products that follow the
dictates of changing fashion moods more closely. For these products,
putting a long-term commitment on any significant proportion
of this segment to specific suppliers can be counter-productive.
It can create a sense of security in the supplier, or even the
buyer, possibly reduce the drive towards product and service
innovation, and maybe even make the overall sourcing-supply
relationship relatively inefficient over a period of time.
There is a sense of 'supply dependence' associated with supply
consolidation, in comparison to the sense of 'interdependence'
that comes from a flexible (even though not fully open) network
of buyer and supplier relationships. A cosy 'strategic' relationship
that assumes a two-way exclusivity also creates a relatively
narrow channel of ideas and developments, and becomes largely
process-driven at the cost of creativity. This is fine if you
are selling the same product year-in, year-out; but certain
suicide (or slow poison, at best) if you are in any part of
the fashion market.
This is not to imply that strategic relationships can't work
in the 'fashion' arena. But make sure that in such a relationship
the suppliers who are worried, nay paranoid, about their own
survival. In the best organisations, uncertainty brings about
creativity - pick a strategic supplier like that, and you've
picked a winner!
Achieving the golden mean
Of course, a perfect balance between long-term strategic suppliers
and new relationships is as elusive as the perfect business
strategy. If one set of rules governed sourcing in the apparel
and textile industries, the sector would have been consolidated
around this many decades ago.
Previous experience is certainly a worthwhile guide to selecting
suppliers and supply countries. But the competitiveness of supply
bases is changing all the time, and suppliers are constantly
developing new capabilities around the world. As someone once
said, in business relying only on past experience is like driving
a rally sports car blindfolded, while the navigator guides you
looking through the rear windshield!
By using the tools to discover, build and maintain new relationships
efficiently, most buyers should keep their doors open for new
suppliers to walk in and display their capability. Closed doors
mean closing the possibly to innovative products, significant
margin improvement, and even new methods of doing business that
might bring about tremendous improvements in 'sourcing profitability'.
In a different context, a presentation at the National Retail
Federation (NRF) seminar in the USA in 1999 by consultant Kurt
Salmon Associates mentioned the potential need to move away
from the 'super-specialised' and 'super-analytical' role of
today's retail buyer to bring in shades of the 'merchant' of
the past.
The truth is that successful retailers have never really abandoned
the merchant principle. This degree of freedom is essential
to maintaining the healthy influx of new ideas that keep a retailer's
brand alive with the customer and keep it moving ahead in the
market. During the selection process, smart buyers even look
at the customer list of their suppliers with a conscious effort
to imbibe product trends, technical knowledge and best practices
from other companies in their own or other markets.
Managing diversification
The key factor that needs to be managed is the effort on the
buyer's part. If a buyer could manage more relationships with
the same amount of time and effort, he would probably make more
effective use of his own and his supplier's capabilities to
create a more dynamic product and service offer.
Two primary tools come to mind for creating and managing a
more diversified supply base: collaboration and technology.
In 'collaborating' with the supplier, the idea is to see both
buyer and supplier as part of the same demand-supply chain.
In fact, take it right back to the supplier's supplier. Understand
that the processes run across organisations, rather than residing
in any one - the buyer has as much responsibility and accountability
in the sourcing process as the supplier. Information must be
shared more transparently, and the overall sourcing process
must be managed together, beginning from the product conceptualisation
to final delivery. Brainstorming helps, 'blame-storming' doesn't.
This approach is as equally valid with a new supplier as with
an old, trusted supplier. Good buyers already follow this approach,
and it shows in their company's market performance and financial
results. And it does not even add lead-time; in fact, in many
cases, it cuts down time.
Secondly, make use of emerging technologies. Don't just depend
on a company's database or EDI systems. There are a number of
tools available today which are relatively inexpensive and easy
to use - from the basic supplier profiles available on the numerous
marketplaces and exchanges around the world, to more advanced
technologies that enable collaborative management of product
development and sourcing process management.
There are even well developed systems that can act like virtual
assistants, helping buyers and suppliers to keep track of order-specific
tasks, and updating each other automatically of the status of
these tasks. If you did not have to spend effort on fighting
the fire caused by the task that you forgot yesterday, would
you have a little more time available to speak to that new supplier
whose profile you liked but just could not make the time to
meet?
There is no quick fix, and each situation will be different.
But I believe that for many buyers, the choices are becoming
rather stark. Innovative or staid product? Market leadership,
or complete loss of the pole position? Survival or decline?
The choices that you make today have a habit of showing up in
the profit and loss statements of tomorrow.
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