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What Does The Buyer Want, Anyway? Part III

 

Robert Menard, Certified Purchasing Professional, Certified Professional Purchasing Consultant

Robert Menard, Certified Purchasing Professional, Certified Professional Purchasing Consultant

Editor’s Note: This is Part III of a three part installment on how sellers can better identify and serve the buyer’s interests.  Part I explored business from the buyer’s viewpoint, Part II examines specified how to use TCO to sell ‘Best Value’, and Part III provides specific tools for managing TCO.

This worksheet is a simplified version for the sake of clarity.  It is a tool for computing an estimate of the Total Cost of Ownership of a purchase as well as evaluating performance with objective measures. 

Your worksheet should be expanded to reflect the buyer’s specific concerns.  The metrics should be as simple, objective and meaningful as possible.  Avoid messy formulas as they are dismissed as hocus-pocus.  Here are just a few examples of what you can add. 

Quality Service Delivery
Down Time Training Stock outs/Back Orders
Maintenance & Repair Tech support Inventory turns
Shelf Life E-commerce capability Customs/duty
Warranty Period R & D Obsolescence

Our model represents only the impact on Price caused by of shortcomings in Quality, Service and Delivery.  For simplicity, we choose to surcharge the Price as indicated, and then add the surcharges to the Price to determine a TCO.  This technique powerfully demonstrates the affect on Price of the other elements of Cost and neutralizes the buyer’s natural pressure on price. 

This all looks like a lot of work to get to the end of the rainbow.  You can be certain of that!  Is Sales doing the buyers’ work for them?  Maybe, but who ever said that figuring out what the buyer wants would be easy, anyway?  The real issue is to decide whether it is worth the sweat?  In today’s value-added world, you be the judge of that.

TOTAL COST OF OWNERSHIP

Worksheet showing the affect of certain Cost elements on a $10.00 purchase Price 

Cost Priority MetricCost impact Explanation/rationale of metric’s applicability How to Apply

Surcharge

Totals
Rate Amount

#1

 

Quality

 

Rejection

Rate

Use a measured % of rejections

Assume 5% rate

5%

$0.50

 

 

 

 

 

 

$3.00

Useful Life

A $500 unit lasting 1 year costs more than one at $750 for 2 years

$500/yr vs.$375/yr is a 25% shorter life

25%

$2.50

Sub total of surchages for Quality Cost element

#2

 

Service 

Response Time

Set a 1 day time limit.  For each day beyond, add a 5% surcharge If 2 days late @ 5%/day = 10%

10%

$1.00

 

 

 

 

 

 

$2.50

Convenience

Some metrics are subjective.  For these, estimate a Cost impact. Assume a flat 15% factor for example

15%

$1.50

Sub total of surchages for Service Cost element

# 3

 

Delivery

On Time

Delivery

Fix a due date.  Surcharge for every day late (or early).  Example: 8 % Assume 3 days late @ 8%/day equals 24%

24%

$2.40

 

 

 

 

$2.40

Sub total of surchages for Delivery Cost element

 

 

#4

Price

Price

The price is the price Price is used as the basis of surcharge for the other three cost elements! Plug in the $10.00 price used as a basis for the above surcharges

None

$10.00

$10.00

Grand Total of Sum of Surcharges for Quality + Service + Delivery + Price to get Total Cost of Ownership

$17.90

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