Program planning (Drafting purchase requirements and specifications)
- Evaluation of RPQs and RFPs
Contract management (monitoring & control)
Exhibit I- Consumption-based purchase planning
Procurement Planning
This paper has three main parts. Part one describes the process of purchase planning and the method through which medium and large organizations conduct purchase planning. Part two of the paper analyzes the main purposes of a procurement plan. The main purpose of a procurement plan is to integrate the procurement activities with the business and strategic level goals of the firm. It also enhances the competitive cost positioning of the firm and increases the level of coordination between different stakeholders in the supply chain of the firm. Part three of the paper analyzes three main components of a procurement plan. The last part of this paper presents the conclusion and recommendations aimed at improving the performance of procurement management.
Introduction
Businesses engage in planning of their materials' management to achieve business-level goals and competitive advantages. There are a number of stakeholders involved within the supply chain. Early coordination is needed to make the procurement process cost effective and time efficient. The purchase planning process is essentially a process in which companies plan their purchase activities for a period. The most desirable outcome of the purchase planning is to eliminate over ordering and under ordering. Over-ordering causes an organization to overspend its working capital resources as over-ordering results in additional storage resources required to maintain excess supplies. Under-ordering may result in shortage of critical supplies required to manufacture the committed products or a delay in service delivery. The purchase planning process also aims at decreasing the uncertainty of cyclical shortages and surpluses of materials.
Also known as the procurement planning process, purchase planning is executed during the budgeting process whereby each department and division of a business is required to request budgets for their annual expenses, purchases and staff needs. The department is required to determine the projects and tasks for which materials purchasing are being proposed. Having received the total demand of purchases, the procurement department identifies the common purchasing requirements. In large organizations having huge procurement needs, each division of the firm is expected to carry out the purchase planning process strategically, keeping in consideration the business plans of their division. Since Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) is practiced by a majority, the majority of large scale enterprises change the planned orders into purchase orders.
The purchasing officer of the procurement department identifies the potential vendors based on cost, lead time for delivery, and transportation costs to the buyer. Planned order is converted into purchase requisitions and the procurement officer then decides on the schedule of delivery for the requested materials (See Exhibit I). The delivery schedules are prepared in coordination with the concerned departments who had initially requested the materials. It is pertinent to mention that there are several techniques for managing 'consumption-based purchase planning. Three of them are:
Reorder point planning: The purchase requisition is generated once a predetermined reorder point has been reached in the warehouse stock.
Forecast-based planning: In this method, forecasting programs are used to determine the future demand and forecasting is performed on regular intervals.
Time-phased planning: In this method, planning calendars are drafted, and materials can only be requested after the passage of specified gap of time.
2. Purpose of the procurement plan
A procurement plan carries a detailed description of the materials that an organization plans to purchase during a specified time. The procurement plan also identifies the time for purchasing and the details of potential suppliers and vendors. Organizations use the procurement plan to mitigate the risks associated with supply chain management. There may be different purposes for different organizations to have a procurement plan. Large scale enterprises have integrated ERP systems and procurement plans are an integral part of these systems. Small or medium scale firms prepare procurement plans to mitigate risks of cyclical surpluses and shortages of supplies.
Integrating procurement plans with strategic and business goals: One of the most important purposes to develop procurement plan is to synchronize the procurement plan and expectations of materials requesting entities to the business plan of the respective department as well as with the strategic aims of the organization. Anderson and Katz (1998) described that business leaders are turning towards increasing the shareholder value and reducing the operational costs. Procurement is increasingly seen as a strategic task and not just a function of purchase department. To discourage wasteful purchasing, overstocking, and procurement of potentially harmful materials inconsistent with the firm's corporate image,...
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