Building effective procurement teams: the struggle is real

GregTennyson.jpgThe conversation around talent shortages in the procurement space has been going on for five to ten years now. Greg Tennyson, CPO at VSP Global, has come to realise that the real problem is not the lack of ready-to-go procurement talent, it is the hiring managers’ inability to see a future procurement professional in a law student, a finance professional, an engineer or yes, even a sales person.

An investment is required to grow non-traditional sources of talent into procurement professionals, but the end result is often a better-rounded team. In order to speak the language of the business, a procurement team should comprise a diverse talent by design. A homogeneous team will have its own inherent challenges – one being that innovation is harder.

How you build your team depends on your market conditions and the skills – or talent profile – you are hiring for. Depending on the availability of qualified candidates, you may allow someone to work virtually, or look to other disciplines to bring a new resource in, and then round them out. But to simply say ‘there’s a talent shortage’ and do nothing about it is a naysayer’s approach. Get creative.

Cross-functional procurement talent

At my prior company, I had an engineer playing a procurement role. I had somebody in finance on the team. I had attorneys on the team. If you restrict yourself to an artificially small portion of the talent pool by insisting upon a fixed skill set, you’re naturally going to have hiring challenges. Just keep an open mind.

My philosophy – regardless of the skill set in question – is to hire the best resource you can find, train them, and invest in them. If they stay, they will become successful procurement professionals. If they leave, they will be well informed enough to serve as advocates for procurement.

But thinking differently is not just about where we source talent, it also affects the skills we are focused on. Procurement will quickly lose relevance if we don’t proactively prioritize soft skills in our hiring practices.

Look at the traditional competencies for a procurement professional: the ability to negotiate successful outcomes, the ability to read and redline a contract and the ability to build relationships. In my opinion, soft skills are now more important in procurement than some of the technical skills we have emphasized in the past.

Taking risks to incorporate high performers

All good managers want to put people into roles that will challenge them in a healthy way. I’ve put people in roles that I knew would be hard for them, and I was authentic enough to say, ‘This is going to be a make or break situation for you. Grab the opportunity, and I’ll invest in you. If you are successful, wonderful, if not I’ll be your best reference.’ The reality of the situation is that you have to release people if they aren’t a good fit, even when it is a tough decision. But that is not a reason not to make an effort to bring non-traditional backgrounds and approaches into procurement.

In my experience, there is more than one kind of high performing professional. Some lack engagement and become a challenge, but that is not hard to handle. Complacency is a bigger problem. Having a pep talk with people that are no longer motivated, is challenging. You have to educate people on what the opportunities are for them. By understanding what’s important to them (work life balance, career development, etc.) you can identify what motivates them.

The same approach works for building relationships with internal stakeholders. Sit with the business, understand what their challenges are, look at the opportunity from their perspective. I think demonstrating that appreciation makes you more effective. Each of us need to appreciate the culture we are in, and operate within that culture: the culture of procurement, of the company, and of the industry as a whole.

Human behaviour is interesting. If somebody has confidence in their ability to do something they’ll gravitate towards it. A lot of individuals are focused on transactions; they are tactical. You can’t just go in and anoint somebody and say, ‘Now you’re strategic.’ You must develop their capabilities, and create the expectation that they are no longer in their former role. Otherwise, a week, a year, two years into the process they will gravitate back towards those transactional responsibilities. Being a leader in the procurement space requires us to adapt and be flexible.

What’s next for procurement?

I’ve watched procurement gradually shift away from a focus on tactical- or technical capabilities, to more strategic responsibilities and the development of soft skills. I’ve seen it, and I’ve lived it. The organizations that have not jumped on that bandwagon of their own accord, are no longer relevant.

The shift has occurred, and technology has been a key enabler in making that happen. When people talk about applying robotic process automation (RPA) or AI within the procurement space, the first steps have already been taken, and we’re trying to figure out how we can further leverage it.

This article was originally published on The Art of Procurement

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