Procurement teams and engineers involved in MRO face a series of complex daily challenges
From minimising downtime through to ensuring contract compliance, every aspect of maintenance, repair and operations (MRO) purchasing has the potential for complexity, which can mean added cost. So how can this cost be reduced?
Lawyers have a saying: hard cases make bad law. The same goes for MRO procurement. All too often, emergency purchases can turn out to be expensive mistakes. Avoiding costly downtime in the event of a component failure is, of course, paramount. But if you want to avoid expensive admin and processing time, it is necessary to focus on total cost of ownership (TCO) and not the item price.
The time-sensitive nature of MRO is partly to blame for the way hidden costs can mount up. Time spent by an engineer ringing round different potential suppliers hoping to strike lucky is just the tip of the TCO iceberg. The pressure to get the job done is understandable. But while ad hoc purchasing can feel like the fastest way to solve a problem, in reality, wasted time is not being saved – it is just being passed along to someone else.
When an invoice appears in the purchase ledger accountant’s inbox with no accompanying details, a long process of trying to establish its validity begins. It may need to be allocated to a particular job, or even charged back to a customer. It almost certainly needs a PO and if it’s come from an unheard-of business, that supplier will need setting up on the payments system.
There may be forms that need to be completed, credit checks to be undertaken, compliance with modern slavery laws to be ensured and more besides. All of which takes time and takes people away from other tasks they could be working on. At every step, the costs are adding up.
Order in haste, repent at leisure
Financial pressures are never far from a procurement professional’s mind, of course. Annual research by RS and the Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply (CIPS) has shown that reduced operational budgets are consistently one of the biggest pressures they face.
It is known indirect procurement process costs can be twice as much as the products themselves. This is a significant additional expense that isn’t always obvious to everyone who gets involved in placing orders for urgently needed items. It’s also an illustration of why price and cost are not always synonymous.
There are yet more hidden costs waiting to reveal themselves. Imagine a scenario where a part purchased in haste to fix a customer problem fails unexpectedly in the future. The customer will demand a replacement, there may be additional damages caused which they may expect to have reimbursed, there may be costs from downtime that they want to be compensated for.