Catch CEO Siddharth Sridharan and VP procurement strategy sharing their insights from SaaS trends in 2023, and what lies in 2024 and beyond.
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0:00
(upbeat music)
0:02
- Hello, I'm Sadash Ridun,
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I'm the co-founder and CEO of SpenFlow.
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- And I'm Jimmy Hawzworth,
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I'm the VP of procurement at SpenFlow.
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- Today, we'll be chatting with Jimmy
0:20
about the biggest trends in procurement
0:22
and what teams we're seeing for 2024.
0:25
First off, I'd love to understand
0:27
how you got into procurement, Jimmy.
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What was the like, pot?
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- Yeah, it's a stupid story.
0:32
So I went to school with Dreams of Being a Radio DJ.
0:37
Who goes to school to be a Radio DJ?
0:38
I don't know.
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- Yeah.
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- Got my degree in media.
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That's why I've been given the production crew hell today.
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Got my degree in media and honestly,
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one of the things I realized was
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I didn't see as much opportunity
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because radio was dying, right?
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It was already in decline.
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It was living on ramen noodles
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in a very, very small place and said,
1:00
this isn't what I want.
1:02
So I moved back to Atlanta with the family
1:05
and actually got a job as a buyer for a reseller work.
1:10
And so they would buy heavy machinery
1:12
and fix it and repair and then resell.
1:15
And what I learned there was I loved buying.
1:18
I love negotiating.
1:19
Like it was fun, it was exciting.
1:22
So went through that path,
1:23
kind of went on a crazy journey of buying IT hardware
1:28
then to buying roller coasters for an amusement park,
1:31
then oil and gas.
1:33
And then to consulting.
1:34
And so consulting was good
1:35
'cause I got to see a very big,
1:37
this is at the Shelby Group,
1:38
I got to see a very big gamut
1:40
of different customers from Pfizer to retail,
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to manufacturing to SaaS.
1:45
And it was fantastic.
1:46
And at that point, I really started to love SaaS more and more
1:50
and came across Gong who was hiring
1:54
and built out their procurement org and it was a blast.
1:58
And so for me, watching procurement in this 20 year window,
2:03
not I feel old, in this 20 year window,
2:07
I really got to see how we went from doing faxes
2:11
and picking up a PO off the fax machine
2:15
into the world of now we're sitting across the table
2:18
from leadership helping make strong decisions
2:20
for the organization, right?
2:22
- Yeah, yeah.
2:23
So Jimmy, what are the biggest trends you saw in 2023
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that actually banned out, right?
2:29
Like what was something that you predicted worked out
2:32
or something that didn't work out?
2:33
- Yeah, I think 2023 was a really interesting year
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in that you had a lot of microcosms of like,
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we'll call it market pressure.
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So initially in 2023, CFOs were pressuring CPOs
2:48
and procurement folks to find savings, right?
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We're in the middle of a recession, the markets come down,
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everyone was like, oh, it's gonna end, it's gonna end,
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but it was an ending.
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And so you're doing a lot of contraction.
2:59
You're finding which tools you can exit.
3:01
You're having an as procurement and as finance
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to go negotiate with your stakeholders
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across the organization and figure out,
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hey, which tools can you lose?
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Or we're building in practices of like really digging
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into usage, really understanding what modules
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are being used and not being used.
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So it created some, what was once very specific behavior?
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Really like broad behavior trends across the org.
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So it wasn't just some companies are doing this now,
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all companies are starting to look at this
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and consider pretty important.
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- The, actually one of the points that you pointed out
3:34
was cashy contraction, right?
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So how did you see that effect on internal stakeholders
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as well as the windows, right?
3:41
Like that's a tricky kind of equation.
3:45
- Yeah, so with the internal stakeholders,
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contraction's hard to roll with
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'cause they're now they're saying
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is you not have to do more with less.
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That's what everyone's asked to do.
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So all these tools that were nice to have, they're gone, right?
3:58
Nice to have, unless it's giving you ROI
4:00
is no longer important.
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So you're making those changes.
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And so now you're vendors who, especially in the SaaS world,
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are potentially customers as well,
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are going through that same scenario.
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And so it becomes a really big game
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of relationship management.
4:14
Of how do I create empathy with both the stakeholder
4:18
and the vendor to find common ground to say,
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hey listen, we have to turn this off for now
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or we have to ramp this down for now.
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And we're going to kind of bring it back
4:26
into play in the future.
4:28
It was very challenging.
4:30
We actually some things came up like true down language, right?
4:33
Versus all true ups or opt out clauses
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or building it opt in language for ramp.
4:39
And so it was honestly 2023 early with that contraction was,
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it's where procurement got to shine.
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And so now as you moved further in the year,
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we see expansion starting to happen.
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But when expansion happened, it didn't happen
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like it did in '22 and '21.
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In '20 where everyone was buying SaaS
4:57
'cause we're all remote, right?
4:58
What happened was it became very thoughtful.
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So the themes of usage, of modules,
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of understanding our use cases and requirements
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stuck a lot more even into expansions.
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We moved into what I call conservative expansion, right?
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So we know we're growing, but we're gonna grow the purpose.
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We wanna be thoughtful in all of this.
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- I think it's also caused a lot of empathy
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on the vendor end as well, primarily because they understand
5:20
where their customers are coming from
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because they're probably going through that internally
5:24
as like SaaS users themselves, right?
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So we saw a lot of vendors who weren't that empathetic
5:30
before get a lot more empathetic today, right?
5:33
Like and that's actually playing out.
5:35
So the other side of this is,
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finance is probably sitting on,
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sitting on all of this decision making fatigue,
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that they're like, "Hey, great procurement is my,"
5:46
so I'm go to person for doing this, but it's hard, right?
5:49
Because finance has to make this decision across the board.
5:52
So what do you think are some temporary shifts
5:55
that's happened to finance and procurement
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versus permanent shifts?
5:58
- Yeah, I think from a temporary side
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and we'll start with finance, right?
6:03
Finance temporarily really was asked to ratchet down
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and they're the ones who have to find
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the dollars and the savings across the org.
6:10
So the pressure from finance to both stakeholders
6:14
and procurement to make some really tough decisions was real.
6:18
I think as the markets open back up,
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finance is still very thoughtful in managing that spend, right?
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They're the stewards of the bank account, right,
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for the organization.
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So they're gonna make sure that the money we're spending
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is providing a great return.
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In that pressure, they've now though kind of said,
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we do wanna include growth.
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We do wanna give people the opportunity to find automation,
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to be more efficient, to create more value.
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And so it's come up, but they're just a bigger part
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of the conversation.
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I've never seen finance as involved.
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In procurement, usually it was kind of like,
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yeah, you have budget run with it.
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Now it's, let me understand your use case.
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Let me understand what you wanna do.
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Let me understand what your desired outcomes are,
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what success criteria are.
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They're asking those questions, which is great,
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which means they're better partners with procurement now.
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Because procurement used to ask those questions.
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And finance sometimes would say, well, you have budget.
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It's like, yes, but, right?
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And so now there's a lot less of that.
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So temporarily procurement felt pressure from finance.
7:14
We felt pressure from the business.
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The business didn't wanna contract.
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Finance one and two contract.
7:20
Now it's to a place where I think both parties realize
7:22
that procurement's the bridge to getting the desired outcomes
7:26
versus managing the spend correctly.
7:29
And so with those two things in play,
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everyone's just been happier.
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And now procurement's also there to build a relationship
7:35
with the customer with the vendor,
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which is good.
7:38
Our vendors are now partners.
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They're no longer just when we buy a tool from,
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there's someone who helps us achieve the outcomes.
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- Yeah, so that I think is a permanent shift, right?
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Like the relationship between procurement and vendors
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are actually becoming better.
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They were doing the contraction phase, it was hard,
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but after they've gone through that
7:54
in the, like it's like a battle almost, right?
7:56
Like now they've come out of it as friends almost.
7:59
- I mean, they went through the same thing.
8:00
And that's what's crazy is the recession created empathy
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with both parties, it wasn't there before.
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- Yes, it didn't exist before
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because it was a very one way type of conversation.
8:10
What do you think is like something permanent
8:12
that's happened to procurement?
8:13
- Honestly, I think it's,
8:16
we go back to the more with less.
8:18
I think procurement has had to move
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to this relational more strategic role.
8:22
Meaning that we're not there for transactions.
8:25
Before procurement was seen very much as a transactional
8:29
between my P.O. so I can go buy something
8:31
or purely due to diligence on an RFP, right?
8:35
I think due diligence still exists.
8:37
I think through automation,
8:38
transactions have kind of gone away
8:40
or they were a thing of the past.
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It's the expertise in managing the relationship
8:44
and being creative and finding the value.
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We're now seen as strategic players
8:49
to kind of help company initiatives.
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We're brought into M&A conversations.
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We are heavily working with IT on rationalization efforts,
8:59
businesses when we're building out new programs.
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They're bringing procurement to kind of start,
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"Here's my requirements.
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Here's what I want to do."
9:06
Versus just bringing like a sole source solution saying,
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"Buy this, buy this."
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So it's nice, it's a good fit.
9:13
The challenge is, and this is where
9:16
like companies without procurement struggle a little bit,
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is they have finance trying to fill this role.
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And finance, these are very smart people.
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But they're doing a lot of other things.
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And so to take the time to really understand use cases
9:29
and be creative in solutioning and be part of the solve,
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that's a big ask.
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And so that's where it's like lean on
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super-curment experts to come in
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and help make those solutions.
9:38
Campaigning for procurement teams,
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I think it's important that that bridge
9:44
is starting to be experienced earlier and earlier
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in a company's formation, right?
9:49
The later you bring in procurement,
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the harder it is to kind of fit in that relationship.
9:53
But also I think like there's another shift
9:55
that's become almost permanent is that
9:57
procurement is not gonna get like head contact issues.
9:59
- They don't, no they don't.
10:01
It's the more with less.
10:02
And then so it's interesting, in my past,
10:06
I've had to go and advocate for head counts.
10:09
And I'll go and I'll say, you know,
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I'll be like, listen concurrently,
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when we're working on deals,
10:13
at the level that we need to work on them,
10:16
a buyer can do X.
10:18
And the response I get is,
10:19
"Okay, we'll make them do double that."
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- Yeah. - Right?
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And it's, listen, it's a fair ask
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because I think a lot of individuals
10:27
don't know what goes into a really smart procurement.
10:31
It's not an easy lift.
10:33
There are some that are easy,
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but a lot of them there's complexities.
10:35
There's a lot of negotiation.
10:37
There's taking time to understand
10:38
what the landscape looks like.
10:39
- Yes.
10:40
- And so if you do that, and if you do it right,
10:44
I mean a procurement can take,
10:45
like let's lose your SaaS procurement for example, right?
10:47
A simple SaaS procurement may take a couple hours.
10:50
- Yeah.
10:50
- And you think, "Oh, a couple hours just to renew."
10:52
Got to get contracts signed.
10:53
Got to look at legal language.
10:54
Got to understand if there's opportunity,
10:56
"Oh my gosh, InfoSec."
10:57
Hey, hey, guys.
10:58
Favorite team.
11:00
- Yeah.
11:01
- But there's just a lot of checks you have to do.
11:03
And then as you go into something more complex,
11:05
let's say you're buying AI, right?
11:07
Or you're buying a data link.
11:09
All of a sudden there's just an extra amount of effort
11:13
you have to put into understanding the problem
11:15
and solving correctly.
11:16
And I've seen those deals go anywhere from 10 hours
11:18
to like 30 hours, 40 hours with work.
11:20
- Yeah.
11:21
- And if you can show me teams that have people sitting around
11:24
to take on 40 hours of the work, that's hard.
11:27
And it's hard to quantify because you don't know
11:30
as a leader when those deals come up.
11:33
And so to give former finance leaders
11:36
a little bit of leeway,
11:38
it's tough to justify hiring another head
11:41
to solve for what is a more dynamic workload.
11:46
And so you're seeing more and more of that, I think,
11:49
whether it's outsourced or done through GPOs,
11:52
like people are finding ways to kind of offset
11:54
the more with less.
11:55
Yeah.
11:56
- So Jimmy, what are your top three predictions,
12:01
emerging trends that you're seeing for 2020 fall?
12:04
- Yeah, I think what we're gonna see,
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and this comes from people engaging procurement earlier now
12:09
in companies life cycles,
12:11
is we're gonna move away from like a decentralized procurement
12:16
world.
12:17
And why I say that is we all experience what it's like
12:21
when there's no control and everyone kind of has freedom
12:24
to buy what they think they need to grow, which is great.
12:27
Like you wanna feel growth,
12:28
but you wanna do it with a mindset of protecting
12:32
the company's long-term investments.
12:33
And so now seeing that,
12:35
I think the decentralized model is gonna take a large shift
12:39
to center led, which is procurement is guiding the award.
12:41
You still may have the department wise experts
12:46
driving out some conversation,
12:48
but you'll have kind of that overall,
12:51
like how we think about procurement,
12:52
how we think about buying,
12:53
how we think about my stewards moving to procurement.
12:55
The other thing that I think will be interesting,
12:57
and I'm kind of curious as well to see myself,
12:59
is I think we're gonna start seeing AI play a factor,
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and I can probably dive in on this forever,
13:06
but meaning in how we look at sourcing data,
13:09
how we look at understanding what's going on
13:12
in the market and trends in different categories.
13:15
AI just isn't about creating content.
13:18
AI is gonna start becoming more and more about research.
13:20
And so leveraging AI research to empower your experts,
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I think is gonna be something towards,
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especially towards the end of the year,
13:28
we're gonna see take off.
13:29
I know there's smaller companies doing it,
13:30
and so we'll see what happens.
13:32
And then the final piece is we've moved from buying suites
13:36
to buying best of breed,
13:38
or being willing to embrace younger disruptors in the space.
13:44
And so we're seeing a lot more disruptors
13:47
who survive the recession,
13:48
really start to make an impact,
13:50
kind of ride the wave back up.
13:52
And so as procurement,
13:54
it means that we're gonna have to spend more time
13:56
understanding who's real and who's not real,
13:58
while also empowering our organizations to use those tools.
14:03
And not just say, no, you can't get that,
14:05
go buy the big Cadillac,
14:07
because the big Cadillac may not be the fit
14:10
that that group wants to use to achieve success.
14:13
The other shift I'm seeing is that a lot of procurement leaders
14:16
are turning into strategic influencers.
14:19
What's like a path to actually get there for other procurement?
14:22
Or should all procurement leaders be strategic influencers?
14:25
- All procurement leaders should have a TikTok
14:26
or an Instagram, right?
14:28
Like they should be riding the wave
14:30
with their company social media.
14:31
No, I think it's,
14:33
I think for someone to create that power in the organization,
14:37
they have to have a voice,
14:38
and they have to have a platform
14:39
that they're willing to stand on.
14:42
You should be trying to educate your teams.
14:44
So don't just do procurement to execute procurement.
14:46
Do procurement to teach people what it means.
14:49
- So the other trend I've actually been noticing
14:52
is that a lot of procurement leaders
14:54
are actually becoming strategic influencers
14:56
within the organization and outside.
14:58
Two questions.
14:59
One, should all procurement leaders
15:01
be strategic influencers?
15:03
And second, how do they become strategic influencers?
15:06
That's the path.
15:07
- Yeah, I think first one, if you're a procurement,
15:09
you should have a TikTok and Instagram,
15:11
like go on shopping sprees and fantastic trips, right?
15:14
No, I think yes.
15:17
When we say influencer,
15:19
procurement is now a relationship at an influence game.
15:22
And so you have to be able to move people in a direction
15:25
that's going to still get them the outcomes they want,
15:29
but also drive more value for the company.
15:31
And so it's hard, it's not easy.
15:34
Like one of the things I do when I come in somewhere
15:36
to establish influence is you do your listen and learns, right?
15:41
I go through and I spend 30 minutes or an hour
15:43
with leaders like a VP of IT.
15:45
I know what your roadmap looked like.
15:47
And then I start asking questions during that conversation
15:50
to show empathy, interest, et cetera,
15:55
so that they now want to bring me out on the journey
15:57
and want my opinion as we go through the process.
16:00
You don't want to come in and try to just put controls
16:02
on everything and say like, you know,
16:04
here's the handcuffs of procurement,
16:07
you're not getting out of it, you can't buy what you want.
16:09
You want to come from that place of empathy,
16:10
we talk about it.
16:11
That's the key theme, empathy.
16:13
And you want to really create a desire from them
16:18
to seek your advice, to make sure that what they're doing
16:22
is going to, I don't want to say, please procurement,
16:26
but please finance, right?
16:27
Solve the problems that they need to solve
16:29
while having it as less friction as possible.
16:32
And so from an influence standpoint, that's where you stand.
16:35
I think too, as we talked about with all the smaller tools
16:38
now in the market, as people kind of ramp
16:40
and there's just a lot of different new categories,
16:42
you also have to be able to like guide people
16:46
to the right tool for the org.
16:48
And this is something that we like working with InfoSec
16:51
is really important.
16:53
You could have a tool that is fancy and beautiful and great.
16:56
If it can't get through InfoSec,
16:58
you spend a lot of time designing a process
17:00
around something that won't work.
17:02
So work with your procurement partner
17:03
and let them come and engage to help you find a tool
17:06
that fits and also sell it to your other controls
17:10
in your organization to help get it's where you want
17:13
for a release.
17:14
- Makes sense.
17:15
- You reference AI in your previous conversation.
17:18
And how do you think AI is going to help
17:22
because it's just the buzzword right now, right?
17:24
How do you think it's going to help procurement leaders
17:26
in your view?
17:27
- AI is kind of, it's a unicorn conversation
17:31
because everyone has talked about it.
17:33
We know the legend.
17:34
Some people have seen it in various degrees.
17:36
But what is it really going to become
17:37
when it actually is in existence?
17:39
Is something that's interesting?
17:40
I think all tools have some component now of AI, right?
17:44
It's whether it's a creation of a template
17:48
or a little bit of content or analyzing some information.
17:50
For procurement itself,
17:53
you're asked to now to do more with less.
17:54
That's where AI comes into play, right?
17:56
How can I find automation?
17:58
How can I help myself with,
18:01
I mean, it could be as simple as drafting
18:04
some RFP templates or things like that for your org.
18:08
AI can do some of that.
18:09
Shouldn't be the end all be all, right?
18:10
You take what you get from AI and you make it your own.
18:13
You make it better.
18:15
I think that's the challenge that people run into
18:16
as they explore it is they'll take AI and they say,
18:19
here's my paper, give me 100, right?
18:21
And that's not the case.
18:22
We know how to score against that now.
18:23
So you'll use it to kind of offload
18:27
some of the more trivial task.
18:31
What AI cannot do for us yet
18:33
is it can't replace the expert.
18:35
Meaning AI can't listen to a use case,
18:38
understand, call out more requirement questions
18:41
from a end user to really understand what they want
18:44
and then translate that into a set of tools.
18:47
It may one day, it's not there yet.
18:49
That's a very advanced thought process that has to occur.
18:53
I always say that being a buyer is being a consultant.
18:56
You have to know how to ask why.
18:57
You have to know how to dig deeper
18:59
to get to the real problem.
19:00
AI is not a consultant.
19:02
AI right now is an entry level processor.
19:05
Yes.
19:06
That can work really fast.
19:07
And so while we wait on that to come into play,
19:11
I think it's using it for more of that entry level work,
19:16
which will actually allow us to accelerate
19:18
the growth of the people on our teams.
19:19
Because if I have someone spending less time
19:21
on drafting very simple things,
19:25
then they can spend more time on learning about the market,
19:28
learning about the tools that are out there,
19:29
learning about what's changing in the space.
19:32
I always say that there's a place for tactical roles,
19:35
but tactical roles don't grow as much as strategic roles.
19:38
So strategy makes you think,
19:39
tactical makes you just execute.
19:41
You want both, but I want people who can think and execute.
19:44
So AI is there.
19:46
I think AI will help people move through
19:48
once again the tactical faster
19:50
so they can spend time on really influencing New York.
19:54
Makes sense.
19:55
And so I'm actually gonna play an Uno reverse card.
19:57
And I wanna see like a CEO,
20:00
especially CEO of a procurement company, right?
20:03
From a software company,
20:04
where do you see AI kind of starting to influence
20:07
and impact the market?
20:08
I think it's three, the way we think about AI as well,
20:12
and the way I think about it personally is that
20:14
there's like a, there's three fundamental type of frameworks.
20:18
There's like a framework which is a bot
20:20
and a co-pilot and an insight, right?
20:22
So AI can be applied in all three,
20:24
where there's a lot of the tactical work
20:26
that you're talking about.
20:27
A bot could actually do.
20:28
Answer a couple of questions on,
20:30
"Hey, what's going on with this particular procurement?"
20:32
All of that can actually be done with robot
20:34
and doesn't need the tactical resource
20:36
or the human in the loop for that.
20:37
Wherever a human is required in the loop
20:40
is where a co-pilot can actually come in, right?
20:42
And to assist the human in a particular documentation work
20:47
or an RFP creation or in your contract,
20:50
somewhere in that type of workflow.
20:54
- Yep.
20:55
- And the third is like the ultimate way
20:57
I should think about it as an insight,
20:58
where today, like, you know,
20:59
procurement leaders have to sit down,
21:00
figure out what do I need to renew for,
21:02
what do I need to think about,
21:03
what's the strategy for this,
21:05
renewals for the next coming quarter,
21:07
how do I need to forecast this renewal out,
21:09
what's my spend on this particular tool,
21:11
all of that stuff.
21:12
AI could actually probably do that for you in the future, right?
21:14
And that's the strategic thinking as well.
21:16
I think AI will be able to do the strategic thinking
21:19
a lot quicker than we think it's possible.
21:23
And then from that strategic insight,
21:27
the bot can actually take over from that.
21:29
So I actually look at it as the loop,
21:30
the bot, the co-pilot and the insight,
21:32
the insight invariably powering the bot.
21:36
- I think it's to your first two points, right?
21:38
And the third one would love to see it,
21:40
I think we're far.
21:41
- Yeah.
21:42
- But the first two, I just wanna like summarize.
21:45
So you see it as it's an enhancement, not a replacement.
21:49
- No, it's an enhancement, for sure.
21:50
I think you might be able to optimize
21:54
on that additional headcount down like the road
21:58
in like two years from now,
22:00
but is it gonna like necessarily be the person
22:03
conversing with your internal stakeholders,
22:05
conversing with your vendors to actually make this happen?
22:07
No, it's not, I don't think it's there yet.
22:10
But it's definitely going to help them do more strategic work
22:13
and take the tactical off, which.
22:15
- No, I like it.
22:16
I think it's good insight.
22:17
- Yeah.
22:18
- Awesome, so Jimmy, can you summarize in a couple of points
22:22
on how other companies or other procurement leaders
22:26
should plan for SaaS procurement excellence?
22:30
- Yeah, I think it's, to go back to some of our themes
22:32
from earlier, right?
22:34
The first one, and you leaned on it heavily,
22:35
which I think is great, is be an influencer.
22:38
Don't just be someone who's reacting
22:41
to the state of your business.
22:42
Be someone who is up in front of the decisions
22:46
that are being made,
22:48
so you can kind of set yourself up
22:50
in an agile contract with these tools
22:53
so that you have the ability to flex
22:54
as the market changes, 'cause let's be real.
22:56
The next couple of years, it's gonna be a volatile market.
22:59
It always is, like we're still ramping,
23:00
but you never know when it's gonna stop or slow down,
23:02
and you wanna have levers you can pull
23:05
to protect your organization.
23:07
So that's one.
23:08
The other one that I think really, it matters a lot,
23:11
is surround yourself with the right partners
23:14
and the right people.
23:15
When you go out and get your, you know,
23:16
build your teams, or you build your orgs,
23:18
or you find people in order to work with,
23:20
make sure that you're educating them
23:23
on what procurement is,
23:26
so that they can really provide the value
23:28
for your customers internally,
23:30
for your vendors externally, like the relationships,
23:33
and then for your back office folks,
23:36
like the Infosec Finance legal,
23:38
merge those relationships,
23:39
'cause that's a lot of times where it falls apart.
23:42
And I think the trend is now,
23:43
how do we bring all those together?
23:45
So it comes down to influence,
23:47
and it comes down to people.
23:48
I think, you know, the other things,
23:50
whether it's tools, tools are gonna,
23:53
are changing, you're gonna have to look at those,
23:55
but start with those two pieces,
23:57
and the rest will fall in the place.
23:58
- Awesome.
23:59
- Thank you so much, Jimmy, for joining us today.
24:00
- You're welcome.
24:01
- Hey, be sure to smash that follow button,
24:03
- Yeah.
24:04
- And subscribe.
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