Delivering Projects: DR Sajad Fayezi Monash Business School
Delivering Projects: DR Sajad Fayezi Monash Business School
Delivering Projects: DR Sajad Fayezi Monash Business School
BUSINESS
SCHOOL
Delivering Projects
Dr Sajad Fayezi
Monash Business School
Activity 1a: Opening
▪ Agenda
12:30pm-
A5
Break Lunch 1:30pm
Seminar:
A6
Step 3 Assess supply market; data collection 1:30pm-3pm
A7 Breakout Meeting of category teams 3pm-4pm
A8 Break Afternoon tea 4pm-4:15pm
Seminar: 4:15pm-
A9
Step 3 Assess supply market; data representation 5:30pm
A10 Closing Consolidate and reminders (both module and workshop) 5:30pm-6pm
Assignment
A11
artefacts Students to draft AT3 artefacts; Students to work on DAs 6pm-9pm
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Activity 1b: Objectives of Day 3 Workshop
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Activity 1c: Muddiest point
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Activity 2a: Step 3 – [15 min]
▪ Data collection
– Market
▪ Porter’s five forces model
– Suppliers
▪ RFI
▪ Establish benchmarks through industry databases
▪ Value chain analysis
▪ Supplier research
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Activity 2a: Conduct Market Intelligence Research on Suppliers
▪ Information required
– Total annual purchase volumes
– Interviews with stakeholders for forecasts
– External market research on …
Key
Available capacity Technology trends
suppliers
Price data Cost data Technical
and trends and trends requirements
Environmental
Regulatory issues Other available data
issues
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Activity 2a: Conduct Market Intelligence Research on Suppliers
Trade Annual
Internet Books
journals reports
Snowball Trade Category
Headlines
sampling consultants managers
Investment Analyst Other
Suppliers
reports Interviews sources
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Activity 2b: Porter’s Five Forces Model – [15 min]
Threat of New
Entrants
Supplier Buyer
Market Internal
Bargaining Bargaining
Competition
Power Power
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Threat of New Entrants
▪ Capital markets
▪ Availability of skilled workers
▪ Access to critical technologies, inputs, or distribution
▪ Product life cycles
▪ Brand equity and customer loyalty
▪ Government deregulation
▪ Risk of switching
▪ Economies of scale
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Pressure from Substitutes
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Buyer Bargaining Power
▪ Buyer concentration
▪ Buyer volume
▪ Buyer switching costs
▪ Price sensitivity
▪ Product differences
▪ Brand identity
▪ Impact on quality or performance
▪ Buyer profits
▪ Availability of substitutes
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Supplier Bargaining Power
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Activity 2c: Porter’s five forces role play - [60 min]
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Activity 2c
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▪ Environmental shifts
– a crop blight on the world cocoa market, causing supply to dip 40%,
– multinational arrest of cocoa cartel operatives that frees up supply
– the bankruptcy and folding of one of the largest chocolate manufacturers
– the publication of a study showing that chocolate is causing autism in children who also
take allergy medicine
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Activity 3
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Review
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Review
▪ After understanding the spend patterns, the category team should also educate themselves
as to what is happening in the marketplace, as well as what their internal customer
requirements are. Just as you would perform research before buying a car (e.g., going online,
reading reviews of vehicles, looking into gas mileage, and looking at repair history reports in
Consumer Reports), teams perform the same type of market research on the supply base.
This is critical in building and understanding the key suppliers, their capabilities, and their
capacity to perform and meet the stakeholders’ requirements.
▪ This is a very critical step in the strategic sourcing process, as it involves making sure that all
potential sources of supply are identified and that useful mechanisms are in place for
meaningful comparisons of alternative supply sources.
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Study gap
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Next block
▪ After the sourcing strategy has been determined and suppliers have been
recommended, it is time to implement the strategy and negotiate the contract.
Effective implementation of the strategy includes establishing tasks and time lines,
assigning accountabilities and process ownership, and ensuring adequate resources
are made available to the process owners. The strategy should also be
communicated to all stakeholders, including suppliers and internal customers, to
obtain buy-in and participation.
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Next block
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Activity 5b
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Activity 6: Closing
▪ Closing remarks
▪ Reflections (survey)
▪ Reminders
– Complete DAs
– Work on deliverables
– Complete Study Gap module and DAs
– Make a significant progress with Steps
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Propose plan for study gap
Study Gap
No Activity Description Duration
Read what the Step 4 involves and before starting to work on this
Step, ensure that your category team reviews (you will need to re-
assess the complexity and scope of your chosen product category
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