Does purchasing drive partnerships?

The results of the PMMI's Productivity survey show that few packagers regard their relationships with machinery makers as partnerships. And purchasing executives are most likely to initiate partnering.

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For whatever reasons, most manufacturers don't report that they've established a partnership relationship with packaging machinery makers. Yet a sizable percentage of respondents to a productivity survey say their companies do partner with packaging material suppliers.

So say results fromthe 1995 Packaging Productivity Trends Indicator compiled by the Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute (Arlington, VA). The results were first announced last November at the Packaging Productivity Forum in Chicago. (For more details on the survey participants, see the story on controls, page 54.)

In the survey results (Chart 1), a bit over one-third of the 434 participants said their company had not established a partnering arrangement with any suppliers. But more than 61% had worked in packaging partnerships. Of those, just 6% report working with a packaging machinery supplier.

Based on these and other results, it seems likely that this is really a semantic difference. In defining a partnership, many if not most of us consider only ongoing relationships, rather than those based on a project basis. As we analyze those respondents that reported partnerships, the results seem to suggest a linkage between partnerships and the purchasing department.

Purchasing leads way

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