Supply chain disruptions and lower revenue realisation during the pandemic remain big issues for businesses while they are struggling to survive. As a result, most organisations are taking a hard look at their cost, and procurement heads and their teams are being pressed to increase savings targets.
Traditionally, costs are either being driven by the business’s operations (direct costs) or to support business (indirect costs). Direct costs have been wound down somewhat as organisations have scaled back operations. However, indirect costs have continued to be a drain on finances, and in some cases – like cleaning and IT equipment – increased, as new processes are adopted to manage the impact of COVID-19.
While indirect costs seem to be an easy target, there are significant barriers for procurement teams to overcome. Most indirect costs are not under procurement control, but are instead managed by senior leaders in the organisation. As a result, procurement teams have little influence and often limited experience in purchasing items such as Legal, Financial Services and IT projects. Consequently, it is essential to engage key users and stakeholders to drive initiatives to reduce indirect spend – not through a redistribution of power but a different approach to engage business stakeholders.
When reviewing external legal costs, it is the ‘value of legal’ which should be considered rather than solely focusing on reducing costs. The value is driven by benefits and risk mitigation that legal services provide versus costs of their delivery. Benefits may enable the organisation to make faster and better commercial decisions, capture additional opportunities and meet stay-in-business compliance requirements, while the value of risk mitigation depends on how much it can affect company operations.
The objective for legal costs optimisation is to strike the right balance between benefits, risk mitigation and costs by vigorously challenging demand, specifications, rates and expenses from external providers for maximum value.
In addition, many indirect costs – such as real estate, IT and Telecom – are bound by long-term contracts with significant termination costs or “use or lose” conditions which will restrict the immediate release of cash. As a result, these areas, though often sizeable, are difficult to navigate without significant experience and strong direction.
To overcome these challenges, procurement teams need to position themselves to have the difficult conversations now, using the current situation as a springboard to enter areas which were previously off-limit. Procurement can deliver significant benefits across a range of categories through the right engagement and commitment of relevant business partners. Strong stakeholder engagement, effective reporting and visible leadership will help deliver sustainable benefits. The platform for change and cost reduction has rarely been clearer and stronger across all indirect category spend.
Our client wanted to build an ‘overhead cost lab’ – a team and repeatable program to identify, evaluate and syndicate opportunities to improve effectiveness and reduce total costs for support functions. We were engaged to design, drive and document the pilot program with the legal team – and to identify, evaluate and document ideas to the value of 10% total legal costs.
What we did
Results
Sandeep Agarwal is a Partner at Partners in Performance, with over 18 years’ of experience in improving operations, procurement practices and supply chains. His industry experience spans mining, telecoms, heavy manufacturing, infrastructure, Oil & Gas and financial institutions, amongst others, having successfully led improvement initiatives for clients in Australia, North America, Africa, Asia and Middle East.