General Motors Lopez/PICOS Program
Program for the Improvement and Cost Optimization of Suppliers
1. Overall Strategy
- Get immediate price reductions (please remember that two-thirds of GMs European profit was generated by price reductions we got from our suppliers).
- Secure longer-term price reductions from all suppliers.
- Sort out the first and second tier suppliers.
- Only single source with significant price reductions (18 to 40%) that are firmly backed [tied?] into fixed price, long-term contracts.
2. Tactical Overview
- Establish well-qualified, well-trained, and articulate purchasing clones in all business units to implement these practices.
- Plan extensive supplier price reductions for each car model.
- Send out inquiries around the world in search of the lowest unit price.
- Establish short- and long-term price reduction targets and go very low.
- Know your potential winning suppliers and their competitors inside and out before you begin to negotiate and play first and second tier suppliers against each other.
3. The Underlying Themes
- Identify and parade the enemy as Japanese companies, not GM.
- Understand the balance of power between each supplier and GM.
- Keep taking the temperature with vendor ratings and supplier council meetings.
- Offer exaggerated growth and future order quantities as bonuses.
- Start working with the likely winning suppliers as early as possible on price reductions that are termed cost reduction improvements.
4. Before Awarding the Deals
- Establish long-term contracts as the ultimate goal.
- Establish the long-term contract rules.
- Establish that nonprice factors like tooling costs and R&D are not allowed.
- Resist all suggestions that some supplier costs are not controllable
(i.e., raw materials). - Focus all activities on dramatically and immediately reducing the unit price.
5. The Agreements
- Tie up the short-term unit price.
- Keep nibbling away at the price and terms even at the midnight hour.
- Always appear to be in a desperate hurry, but in reality take as much time as needed.
- Pull the long-term deal out of the cupboard.
- Intensely squeeze some more out.
- Get the supplier to sign.
6. Managing the Chosen Suppliers
- Introduce the suppliers to our corporate commodity councils and our advanced purchasing product development teams.
- Totally involve each supplier’s top and upper management - get commitments that the supplier’s middle management would never make.
- Request that each supplier provide you with detailed information on the cost-profit structure of the products it currently or proposes to sell to us.
- Don’t accept raw material indexes as cost information when a supplier proposes a price increase; get the cost-profit information.
- Establish a friend-buddy relationship with middle- and lower-level supplier people to pass cost-profit and competitive information to us.
- Be prepared indirectly and under pressure to bluff and lie.
- Destabilize each supplier’s people with many urgent meetings and many demands for information.
- Set new deadlines for suppliers to meet but defer decisions to increase their anxiety.
Source: Mack Hanan, Sales Shock! The End of Selling Products - The Rise of CoManaging
Customers, American Management Association, 1998, pp. 24 - 26.
Sumbiosis / Thinkpieces