Post on 01-Jan-2016
Kevin Jacoby
Chief Financial OfficerCity of Cape Town
South Africa
Enhancing Sustainability and
Profitability for Utility Businesses
through Effective & Efficient
Supply Chain Management
Overview
Supply Chain Management (SCM) vs Procurement
SCM as a tool for utility businesses Future developments in the SCM field Enhancing profitability through SCM Enhancing sustainability through SCM
SCM vs Procurement
SCM: the planning and management of all activities involved in sourcing, procurement, conversion, logistics and disposal management
Integrating activities that procure materials and services, transform them into intermediate goods and the final product, and deliver them to customers
The key goal: to respond to uncertainty in customer demand without creating costly excess inventory
SCM vs Procurement (2)
Procurement: managing all aspects related to inputs to an organization i.e. procuring goods, materials and services
Procurement is a sub-set of SCM
SCM includes: Planning, Vendor Management, Tenders And Contract Administration, Orders/Acquisition, Inventory And Stores Management, Disposal Management
SCM as a tool for utility businesses
1. SCM Policy aligned to applicable legislation – Authorised process (approved by Board or relevant
higher authority) Gives clear direction - can be supported by SOP Must be reviewed regularly – taking into account:
changes in legislation, outcome of court cases, new developments, etc
2. Delegations support the Policy, clearly allocating responsibility from the accountable party
SCM as a tool for utility businesses (2)
3. Can extract Value-for-Money: transparent competitive processes implemented with
due care can result in cost savings Only do business with those who do not owe any
money to the utility Clear and understandable specifications that do not
“prescribe” a single product Conducting a due diligence on the financial affairs of a
company can identify cash flow weaknesses or capacity problems which can be taken into consideration when awarding tenders
SCM as a tool for utility businesses (3)
4. Minimise Abuse: Preventative controls built in to: Combat fraud, corruption, favouritism and unfair and
irregular practices; Blacklist vendors or implement other sanctions; Report on the performance of contractors/vendors
5. Ethical Standards set for SCM officials & stakeholders
6. Minimum Competency Standards/Skills sets
SCM as a tool for utility businesses (4)
7. Data: SCM is data-rich dependent Vendor database can be established to enhance
market coverage Tenderer’s information can be compared to current
service provision information Limitations of trade (such as trade with an employee of
the State) can be compared against database of employees
Employees declarations of interest can be verified against vendor information – etc
SCM as a tool for utility businesses (5)
8. Oversight Responsibilities Accounting Officer / CEO overall accountable for SCM Independent party for handling disputes – e.g.
Company Secretary, Legal Advisor
Current and future developments in SCM
Facilitate social or economic imperatives E.g. Green Economy; BBBEE; encourage joint ventures
with SMME’s; enhance employment through labour-rich processes, etc
Demand management Ensures resources required to support strategic
operational commitments are delivered at the correct time, at the right price, at the right location, in the right quantity and at a pre-determined or specified quality
Determines quantities and timing of demands on tenders & orders
Current and future developments in SCM (2)
E-procurement To manage tender submission volumes Improve SCM compliance Aid transparency Promote accuracy of information Speed up tender evaluations and awards
Enhancing profitability through SCM
Competitive processes: Tenders; quotations, auctions and other competitive
bidding processes Promotes competitive behaviour and enhances value for
money Minimizes single sources and getting locked into a single
supplier product
Cost-effective: Significant data commonality and versatility enhancing all
revenue collection actions Comply with legislation/prescribed regulatory framework
Enhancing sustainability through SCM
Fair: open and transparent procedures including pre-qualification processes
Equitable: clearly identify when an entity may or must use a particular process
Flexible: when value is below a prescribed amount, use simpler processes
Transparent: procedures and mechanisms set out for each particular process including opening, registering and recording bids
Thank you
Dankie
Enkosi
Any Questions?