hours less per month in administration
million zlotys in TCO savings
As part of the initiative Why Shopping? As part of the Why Purchasing? initiative, we spoke with Paweł Kudzia from Woodward company. He emphasized the challenges of generating savings faced by companies that have an extensive supply chain. Many suppliers provide components that are ultimately assembled in production. He described his supply chain as "low volume - high mix". You can watch the entire recording in the accompanying video.
We often encounter the situation described by Paweł among our clients. Companies that are OEMs or are positioned high in the value chain are often characterized by the immortal Pareto principle:
However, what strikes us the most is another proportion:
The Pareto principle doesn't work in tail spent management. Solutions are needed that fundamentally change the way we operate to document attractive savings. Today, modern Industry 4.0 technology comes to our aid. It allows us to network devices distributed throughout the production facility with the supplier system.
We had to face precisely such a situation with a client in the railway industry (nowadays often referred to as Mobility).
According to recent purchasing trends, c-class components are classified as „outsourcing by capability”, especially in a low-volume-high mix situation, according to the balance of power matrix. It is assumed that for this type of component, a company wishing to focus on its core business should consider and implement lean solutions. These solutions are based on a service whose key performance indicators are: availability, flexibility, autonomy, savings. The support offered by the provider is to ensure that the client has the flexibility to deliver its core business. Current and future trends in c-suite management point to a move away from the purchase of components towards the purchase of a service related to component availability at an optimal cost.