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 Outsourcing by Degrees
CROWN CORK & SEAL David Hannon, Associate Editor
Purchasing
July 29, 2003 Everyone has their own idea of what outsourced
procurement means – and they’re all right. There are
a variety of different approaches to outsourced procurement from
a full-blown takeover of your purchasing department to bringing
in a niche expert to assist in a specific spend area or technology
implementation. Dan Donaghy, vice president of procurement at $7
billion container maker Crown Cork & Seal in Philadelphia, says
too often purchasing staffers assume that outsourcing equates to
bad news and uses a simple example to explain his take on procurement
outsourcing. “There are two kinds of outsourcing,”
he says. “You might outsource mowing your lawn to someone.
You’re capable of doing it, but you’d rather have someone
else do it. Secondly, you could say you outsource your dental work.
It’s something you couldn’t really do yourself and bringing
in outside expertise can make things go much more smoothly. You’re
outsourcing his expertise and knowledge as much as his hands.” Armed with this philosophy, Donaghy sought a way
to cut his company’s procurement costs in the midst of the
dot-com boom. Donaghy oversees about $50 million worth of capital
goods, services, and MRO for Crown Cork & Seal, which has separate
groups to handle its steel and aluminum spend, as well as transportation.
Donaghy knew that technology was going to play a role in his company’s
reducing procurement costs, but at the same time, he felt that more
strategic sourcing concepts like consolidating volumes among vendors
were also going to play a role. It was the mix of the two he had
not yet figured out. In the midst of this evaluation, procurement outsourcing
firm ICG Commerce came knocking on Donaghy’s door and claimed
they could save Crown Cork & Seal 7% on its office supplies
spend with Staples. It would be the same supplier offering the same
products, but for 7% less. Donaghy was skeptical and to get to the
bottom of the claim, he invited his Staples rep to come in and talk. “In talking with Staples, I found there were
really three different ways for us to buy from them,” Donaghy
said. “First, we could continue to let people buy from the
paper catalog using our ‘approved’ list of supplies.
Secondly, they presented the option of buying all supplies through
the Staples web site. Lastly, there was the option of buying it
all through ICG Commerce. We found that moving to the Staples web
site would provide one level of savings. But when I asked about
ICG Commerce, the Staples rep just smiled and said there was a different
price for that.” The buying volumes of ICG Commerce let a major
supplier like Staples afford to sell at lower rates. Just as Staples
leverages its volumes to get better prices with its suppliers, ICG
Commerce would do the same for Crown Cork & Seal by combining
its volumes with other buyers. In the end, a 22% savings was realized
on the Staples spend. The ICG Commerce model lets Crown Cork & Seal
keep its contract negotiation centralized but allow plant-level
procurement of supplies. No longer did purchasing managers have
to maintain an approved list of what buyers could and could not
request from Staples because the new system provided visibility
into everything that was being bought. Once up and running, there
were very few items bought that were out of the ordinary and Donaghy
says it is rare to see a purchase get reviewed today. But this type of system works well with office
products because one supplier is likely as good as another in terms
of product. Many of the suppliers on the system are large distributors
in their industries, but niche direct materials suppliers are not
often available. That’s where the outsourcing services option
comes into play. When a buyer wants to work with a supplier outside
the ICG Commerce system, there are two choices: either request ICG
Commerce go out and source the product or source the product in-house
as it would normally. For example, Donaghy says there are some specialty
electronic components for which Crown Cork & Seal still deals
direct with some suppliers, negotiating prices one-on-one because
ICG Commerce has no experience with those suppliers. “We realized ICG Commerce was the medium,
not the solution to our problems,” says Donaghy, referring
to the additional effort it took to get more store-room items on
the system. “For example, an employee wanted to buy two clamps
and 100 feet of wire, but the computer told him he has to buy 100
clamps and 1,000 feet of wire. So we called the supplier and found
we need the same interpersonal support with that supplier we had
before ICG Commerce. We could talk to them and decide what is the
best thing and place the order and then follow up through the new
system. But we were still negotiating with our suppliers and maintaining
that relationship.” Right now about 70% of the spend that Donaghy oversees
is going through ICG Commerce and the remaining 30% is being reviewed
to see if it could be put on the new system. A recent study for
the beverage division found that buyers working off the system did
not see a sizeable savings but continued to put in the extra work
of buying offline with their historic suppliers. To remedy that
situation, ICG Commerce worked to negotiate better deals with suppliers
in those spend areas, enticing the suppliers with greater volumes
overall if they lowered their prices in these areas. “ICG Commerce will do a market basket study
and if we’re not making any money, they’re not interested
in us participating,” Donaghy says. “They are making
their part of it on the difference in what they’re paying
now and what we will pay to these suppliers.” Crown Cork & Seal experimented with the use
of e-auctions for its corrugated buy, saving 14%, but Donaghy says
there are not many categories between what’s on ICG Commerce
and what is pure metal or material handled by another group, so
there are not many options for auctions. “You go right from raw materials to stretch
wrap in our spend,” he says. Also, Crown Cork & Seal usually
requires two suppliers for its major spend areas, which does not
lend itself to the e-auction model.” The major benefits of moving to ICG Commerce are
that buyers no longer have to deal with the minutiae of contract
terms and simply buy off the system where possible. Donaghy says
two-thirds of the requisitions his department used to process have
disappeared since moving to the system. And buyers are continually
comparing prices to ensure those offered through ICG Commerce are
the best available. “We like to see the plants pushing back and
saying they can get a certain product for a better price and we
like to find out why they can get it cheaper from that supplier
as opposed to through ICG Commerce,” Donaghy says. Back to Top  |