I have been working at Peersgroup for 3 years, a consulting firm specialized in transformation, where I am a senior consultant.
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I manage a scope related to procurement strategy and procurement performance for fairly mature companies, meaning those with more than 500 employees.
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The assignments are very varied and can consist of:
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Before Peersgroup, I had various experiences as a procurement manager for over 3 years.
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I would say there are 4 main challenges in the procurement departments of the companies we support at Peersgroup.
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These challenges can of course vary depending on the industry sector or the context and financial challenges of the company: growth, decline, profitability, expansion, etc.
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Procurement teams are often incentivized on these savings. This is calculated in different ways: cost avoidance, cost reduction with savings calculations based on (i) the planned budget, (ii) the difference between the first offer received and the final accepted offer, or (iii) the P&L, comparing year N expenditures to those of year N-1.
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This involves making sure that all expenses are budgeted beforehand. The ultimate goal is to have no "surprise" expenses, out of budget and off the radar.
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The P2P (Procurement-to-Pay) process is thus linked to the financial budget of the companies to ensure that expenses are properly budgeted and anticipated. This is indeed key for finance teams to manage the health of their company smoothly: knowing where I spend, with whom, and having visibility on the status of expenses among those that are planned, committed, paid, and to be paid.
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With better control of administrative tasks and good tooling for the teams - especially the procurement teams but also all employees who make or approve purchases, such as managers of certain departments.
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Compliant with the company’s policies and validated by the Procurement Department to avoid any risk. Controlling suppliers is indeed the final brick but becomes very important as the company structures and grows.
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There are several types of tools used in Procurement departments depending on the topics covered:
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Our client had a semblance of a procurement process with a makeshift purchase request and an invoice tool with Spendesk. However, expenses and purchases were never really linked to a budget, so the goal was to connect everything to truly understand consumption against the budget.
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We concluded that Payflows was the best solution for our client given their context and the fact that they were already using Payflows for cash management and payments
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What we were looking for - for this client - included, among other things:
Making a purchase request before working with suppliers rather than only when the invoice is received, which is too late and does not give the finance teams visibility on planned and committed expenses.
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Payflows addresses all these issues within a multi-country, fast-growing organization with, additionally, a cash management and payment module that communicates perfectly with the P2P module.
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Following a tender process conducted by Peersgroup where we evaluated 5 different solutions, we concluded that Payflows was the best solution for our client given their context and the fact that they were already using Payflows for cash management and payments. The integrations are therefore perfect.