Strategic or tactical

As timelines tighten and product merchandising becomes more sophisticated, there is a growing need for the continuous control and sustainable solutions that strategic uses of CP can provide.

Pw 6715 Figure1 Copy

Global contract service providers are proliferating, yet few brand owners have established truly strategic approaches to engage them. Leading consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies often have hundreds of service providers under contract. But they have no way to know whether standards, processes, specifications, or reporting mechanisms are being effectively managed.

The stakes are high, with consequences for nonconformity ranging from minor quality issues to major recalls and loss of brand value. New research from Packaging & Technology Integrated Solutions (PTIS) and Contract Packaging magazine reveals the contracted services industry is strong and growing (44% of respondents say they will use more contract packagers in the next 12 months), but clearly there is justification for a more strategic approach to procuring contracted services. The survey results, while not scientific, convey in general that more brand owners are about to move in that direction.

A strategic approach can help brand owners meet the packaging challenges inherent in today’s branding and retailing dynamics that, for example, emphasize speed to market, short life cycles, special channel packaging, and frequent stock rotations. These merchandising approaches require shorter product runs in which both the product formula and the package-label text or graphics might change often. The strategic approach might be appropriate when few or no alternate suppliers are available to the brand owner on short notice. Options may be limited because of a need for proprietary equipment or processes or other factors making the initial supplier’s capability unique in its ability to meet a brand owner’s specific needs.

Relationships important

In this type of situation, the buyer should develop a strong supplier relationship in which the contract-packaging vendor is both capable and committed to both a brand owner’s ongoing success and to the longer-term nature of the relationship. The buyer is best-suited to establishing a price with the supplier through negotiations based on a clear understanding of cost and alternatives, as well as the potential for an ongoing business relationship.

The strategic approach contrasts with the more traditional tactical use of contract-packaging services. A tactical approach is best-suited when several alternate suppliers are available that can take on a brand owner’s business should supply be interrupted from a selected vendor. Under these circumstances, the impact is minimal to the product manufacturer if the initial supplier encounters difficulty. The expense encountered in making the change in suppliers—defined as “cost to change”—would be seen as low, time to implement would be within an acceptable duration, and appropriate equipment and capacity would be readily available. Overall supply risk to the business would be deemed manageable. Should your assessment show this approach to be a tactical buy, you would be well-suited in placing your business through a competitive bid or auction. Primary focus would be on delivered price, without significant consideration of future business needs.

Contracting companies should understand clearly both the rewards and risks they assume through either the strategic or tactical approaches, and they should approve procurement differently for each alternative. Effectively turning over the execution of a significant portion of your business processes to an outside firm involves complex considerations, and the contracted firm will play a key role in establishing your product quality and availability, and ultimately, play a vital role in consumer satisfaction with your product.

During the past 20 years, brand owners have added hundreds of contract manufacturers and packagers to their supplier lists in response to market demands. As these lists have grown, purchasing departments have added new capabilities just to manage the identification, qualification, and management of contract providers.

These new developments typically are tactical rather than strategic. A few leading brand owners have taken a truly strategic approach to managing these efforts. However, even the leaders have, in some cases, taken their eye off the total target by reducing short-term costs at the risk of sacrificing control of quality.

Reactive practices of sourcing contract packagers based on a short-term need to push new products to market quickly, or simply finding those with lowest cost, are tactical and not “sustainable.” Should brand owners allow this key business process to be sourced strictly on a low-bid basis, their shortsighted objectives might result in customer dissatisfaction and lost market share. These issues are possible if the contracted partner fails to perform as required over the long run.

The approach to placing contracted services depends largely on your assessment of the business being either tactical or strategic in nature. Primary considerations include the nature of the project, the potential risks involved, the availability of alternate sources, and business objectives and imperatives.

The table in Fig. 1 summarizes some of the primary considerations in determining your company’s sourcing approach and the factors involved in changing from tactical to strategic use of contract-packaging services.

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