Companies are realizing the importance and benefits of supply chain management to boost service, improve financials, and reduce operating costs. Efficient supply chains enable companies to be more competitive in the marketplace. Effective supply chain organizations are designed to deliver goods and services fast, cost effectively, and without compromising quality. Optimized and modern supply chain organizations align strategically with end-to-end business processes, realizing market and economic value and providing a competitive business advantage.
CBRE’s Project Management (PJM) platform delivers exceptional outcomes through its strategic supplier partner program, FUSION. With an estimated annual project spend nearing $75 billion globally, CBRE PJM relies on the value of the FUSION program to provide:
• Exceptional project delivery
• Accelerated completion of various capital expenditure projects
• Harnessed buying power of CBRE collectively
• Best-value solutions
Delivering Exceptional Outcomes
Organizations are often consumed with low-cost solutions. Although cost savings are appealing, it’s important to consider a holistic approach to offering best-value and total cost of ownership. If procured goods or services are predicated on unit price alone, there is a myriad of ancillary benefits that most strategic suppliers struggle to offer due to the inability to scale and invest with the needs of the business, or as demand fluctuates. In fact, average acquisition costs account for roughly 20–35% of total cost for most products and services. The balance and majority of total cost is comprised of costs associated to operations, training, maintenance, warehousing, environmental, quality, transportation, and consideration for the salvage value. By contrast, the FUSION program is a tool to enhance operational performance and ensure objectives are met on time and under budget. The program is extremely flexible with client needs allowing project-based solutions to offer the most favorable outcomes. FUSION is not only a mechanism to leverage spend, but a marketplace differentiator built by purchasing category and on the comprehensive foundation of:
• Speed to market
• New product innovation
• New product development
• Increased quality
• Best cost options
• Turnkey solutions
• Program scale
Early Engagement
With sufficient planning and early supplier engagement on projects, FUSION can maximize savings potential and accelerate project completion without compromising quality results. To capitalize on the benefits the program can offer, it’s critical to engage FUSION supplier partners at the onset of project design, or as initiatives are being conceived within architect and engineering (A/E) organizations in the planning phase.
Generally, optimal value is realized when early supplier engagement is employed at the first stages of concept development. An organization’s competitiveness depends on the amount, quality, cost, and timing of its materials and supplies, and the effectiveness of its supply chain. Factors include:
• Materials
• Prototypes
• Value-engineering
• Manufacturing processes
• Packaging
• Logistics
Considered a fundamental activity, CBRE actively engages its suppliers early as 80% of product costs are identified and committed to during the design phase.
Cost Savings
Hard cost savings and avoidances are paramount to any organization seeking to optimize its supply chain, but also to deliver value-added goods and services. With an emphasis on supplier relationship management in critical spend areas, FUSION supplier partners not only create sustained value for clients but constantly seek continuous improvement opportunities to develop a shared strategy and roadmap that include savings initiatives, new product offerings/development, and end-of-life materials. This collaborative approach lends itself well to delivering additional benefits that include:
• Extended warranties
• Extended payment terms
• Product availability and consistency
• Life-cycle services (sustainability initiatives)
• Reduction of operating costs
The ability to deliver double-digit cost reductions from one category of spend to the next has a profound impact on capital budgets and client outcomes. FUSION’s strategic supplier-partner program is heavily focused on various metrics including key performance indicators (KPIs), service level agreements (SLAs), continuous benchmarking, and spend analysis to deliver the greatest client experience with the most positive result.
Proactively Managing the Program
It’s important, if not critical, to ensure effectiveness measurements are in place to reflect the organization’s strategic contribution. As FUSION evolves, CBRE is continuously seeking to identify and deploy additional baseline metrics within the program. Which allows a more personalized approach in delivering metrics that tie back to each individual client, tailoring the output based on their needs.
Conversely, taking a “one-size fits all” approach may result in poor supplier performance and miss the mark on key client objectives and expected outcomes. These supplier measurement indicators will help create a cadence and sense of accountability that expands upon the day-to-day process, becoming more strategic in nature. Some examples used inside of the FUSION program include:
• Proportion of suppliers participating in early product design or other joint value-added activities
• Supplier lead-time indicators
• Savings achieved using the sourcing program
• Supplier quality levels, cost performance, and delivery performance compared to other world-class performance targets
• Best practices for supplier performance improvement
The outcome of proactively measuring on a continual basis will result in a program that can deliver strategic value from one project to the next, but also serve as a benchmark to assess current and future state needs and trends.
Conclusion
FUSION will evolve over time as CBRE’s corporate business needs and objectives continue to shift in support of its clients’ needs from a regional and global perspective. CBRE will continue to listen intently to its clients, solving various challenges and providing ultimate client solutions. FUSION, as a program and client delivery mechanism, is equally as adept in responding to those ever-changing needs through a best-value solution. Remember, early supplier engagement is crucial to not only create sustained value for clients but to also discover continuous improvement opportunities and cost savings initiatives.
About the Author
Terry Doumkos is the Global Leader of Strategic Sourcing Project Management and Global Leader of CBRE’s FUSION Program.
Related Stories
| Mar 19, 2014
How to develop a healthcare capital project using a 'true north charter'
Because healthcare projects take years to implement, developing a true north charter is essential for keeping the entire team on track and moving in the right direction.
| Mar 18, 2014
6 keys to better healthcare design
Healthcare facility planning and design experts cite six factors that Building Teams need to keep in mind on their next healthcare project.
| Mar 18, 2014
How your AEC firm can win more healthcare projects
Cutthroat competition and the vagaries of the Affordable Healthcare Act are making capital planning a more daunting task than ever. Our experts provide inside advice on how AEC firms can secure more work from hospital systems.
| Mar 13, 2014
Do you really 'always turn right'?
The first visitor center we designed was the Ernest F. Coe Visitor Center for the Everglades National Park in 1993. I remember it well for a variety of reasons, not the least of which was the ongoing dialogue we had with our retail consultant. He insisted that the gift shop be located on the right as one exited the visitor center because people “always turn right.”
| Mar 12, 2014
14 new ideas for doors and door hardware
From a high-tech classroom lockdown system to an impact-resistant wide-stile door line, BD+C editors present a collection of door and door hardware innovations.
| Feb 21, 2014
Naturally ventilated hospital planned in Singapore
The Ng Teng Fong General Hospital will take advantage of the region's prevailing breezes to cool the spaces.
| Feb 18, 2014
Study: 90% of healthcare providers say Affordable Care Act is 'step forward,' but major revisions needed
Providers are excited about opportunities to address long-term health issues in the U.S., but worries about the transition persist, according to a new study by Mortenson Construction.
| Feb 17, 2014
Lawmakers may take away control of Florida hospital project from the VA
The project is $100 million over budget and has missed its scheduled completion date.
| Feb 14, 2014
Crowdsourced Placemaking: How people will help shape architecture
The rise of mobile devices and social media, coupled with the use of advanced survey tools and interactive mapping apps, has created a powerful conduit through which Building Teams can capture real-time data on the public. For the first time, the masses can have a real say in how the built environment around them is formed—that is, if Building Teams are willing to listen.
| Feb 13, 2014
3 keys to designing freestanding emergency departments
Having physically disassociated from a central hospital, FEDs must overcome the particular challenges associated with a satellite location, namely a lack of awareness, appeal, and credibility. Gresham, Smith & Partners' Kristin Herman-Druc offers three keys to success.