There is a major shift in the business operating requirements. This is caused by a critical shift in the mindset of the modern customer, who requires products and services produced in business cultures that are socially responsible.
4. • A concept where a company takes responsibility for social and
environmental effects of its business operations. It applies to company
efforts that go beyond what is required by law and regulation.
• Whose laws? They vary.
• Yours
• Suppliers’
• Customers’
• There may be laws regarding child labor or the environment in your
country but not in the supplier’s country. You might not be able to simply
say your suppliers must follow the law. Or even assume they do.
• Your customers might put a requirement onto you that is
tighter than what your law requires
• So, while the definition is “going beyond the laws” you might have to ask your
suppliers to go beyond their laws.
What is Social Responsibility?
5. • Part of a Corporate Social Responsibility program
• Not a stand-alone program
• Often the most difficult part
• Applies to purchasing and incoming logistics
• Often applies to suppliers’ suppliers
• Companies can control their own employees more easily than purchasing
can control suppliers.
• Success requires great negotiating, persuading and sourcing skills.
Supply Chain Social Responsibility
6. An ongoing corporate social responsibility program
Active very top management support and involvement
- Costs might go up
- Sales do increase but can be hard to prove
- If you find a socially responsible supplier costs an extra
$100K, that might look huge on your personal scorecard but
small to a top manager who sponsors this program
Don’t do this without…
7. World wide issue
• Not only developing countries
• Google “sweatshops in ________”
• More likely in developing countries
• Sweatshops in the United States got 114,000 hits on google
• There’s a correlation. Lower GDP leads to higher scores on a
“corruption index”. However, there are corrupt wealthy countries
and ethical developing countries
8. Areas of concern at suppliers
• Labor
• Coerced labor*
• Children
• Adults
• Uncoerced child labor
• Worker safety
• Excess overtime
• Freedom to associate and unionize
*Law: California Supply Chain Transparency Act
9. Environmental issues
• Pollution
• Air
• Water
• Land
• Humane treatment of animals
Humane treatment of animals: Obvious if you are a food or perhaps cosmetics company. But
do you have a company cafeteria? Where are they getting their food supply from? Is their
supplier humane?
• Carbon/energy/sustainability
• Supplier processes
• Shipping to you
Carbon/energy…your choice of supplier and shipping method has a big impact on your “carbon
footprint.”
10. Political/Citizenship issues
• Corruption and bribery
• By supplier
• By your company
• Conflict minerals
• Ores for tungsten, tin, tantalum and gold
• Law: Dodd-Frank Act
• Small and disadvantaged suppliers
• Exporting jobs
11. Other issues
• Damage or injury to customers and your employees due to
poor process change control at your supplier
•Lead in paint on toys
• Sulfur in wallboards
Critical note:
Both of these can involve process changes at a supplier.
Samples and initial production can be fine but things can
change later on. Be careful!
12. Damage to your company
Direct financial damage
- Legal and contractual liabilities
Reputational damage
- Can affect sales
- Stronger effect if you sell a consumer product
13. Your tool kit
Preventive sourcing techniques
Supplier Code of Conduct
Contractual clauses
Internal codes of conduct
Supplier audits
14. Sourcing techniques
• Try to avoid problem country-industry combinations
• US Department of Labor database
• http://tinyurl.com/coercedlabor
• 134 products, 17 countries
• Doesn’t mention any U.S. industries but be careful about
U.S. agriculture: 12 year olds can work in agriculture
Avoid intermediaries
Agents, brokers
15. Sourcing techniques, continued
Visit the supplier’s facility that you will be using
Be realistic about the power of contracts
Be sure the supplier has a system to get customer approval for key
process changes
Don’t be a supplier’s first export customer
Consider an International Purchasing Office
Give local suppliers a chance
16. Supplier Code of Conduct
Describes how you expect suppliers to act
Usually referred to in contracts
Length varies from two to eight pages
Introduction should address extended supply chain
requirements
- When should your supplier require its suppliers to comply
with your code?
17. Realistic view of contracts
• “We assumed the supplier would follow our contract” is not an effective
defense in eyes of the public
• International lawsuits are slow and expensive
• You need to visit the supplier periodically to assure compliance
• You could subcontract part but not all of this task to an audit firm
• Build the cost of doing this into your landed cost analysis when
choosing suppliers
18. • Your standards should be as high as you expect your suppliers’ conduct
to be
• Need restrictions on bribery and gift giving
Receiving bribes and gifts
• Offering bribes and gifts
Internal standards of conduct Walk the Talk
19. Auditing
• Checking on site that the supplier is meeting:
• Laws
• Your Code of Conduct
• Your contract
• Reserve for special cases
• Expensive to do effectively
• Can prevent relationships with good suppliers from developing
• Chose which suppliers to audit
• Suggest limiting to problem country-product situations
• Develop an audit standard
• Hire an audit firm
• Only big companies can do it themselves
20. Supplier selection
• If possible, don’t buy from suppliers you have to audit
• Sometimes not practical or even possible
• Build costs of audit into landed costs when choosing supplier
• Cost of quality and compliance audits may make higher priced suppliers the
cheaper suppliers
• Call on top management for decision when a responsible supplier is more
expensive
21. Getting started
Get a top management champion
Write a supplier code of conduct
Get key suppliers to agree
Build compliance into your supplier selection scorecard
Modify contract to cover process changes and subcontracting
Write an audit document, hire an audit firm
Start reporting results on your list of Purchasing’s
achievements
Editor's Notes
Not something you want to see news about your supplier. A tragedy. An embarrassment to the purchasing profession. The companies involved said they didn’t authorize production there.
An extreme case, and eye opener and I hope a catalyst for change.
The Procurement Function is primarily responsible for Suppliers and Inputs