The Procurement Maturity Model is more than just a self-
assessment tool; it’s an invitation to transform.
This article was originally published in MedCity News.
In today’s complex healthcare landscape, Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) face constant pressure to optimize resources and maximize value. While clinical excellence is still paramount, a strategic focus on indirect procurement emerges as a powerful, often overlooked, lever for achieving both. Indirect procurement encompasses everything from employee benefits and IT services to design and construction costs, facilities management, and professional services, representing a significant, yet often unseen, portion of healthcare spending.
Navigating this complex and multifaceted domain can take time and effort. Enter the Procurement Maturity Model; a self-assessment tool designed to empower healthcare CFOs and procurement leaders to unlock hidden value within their organizations. Further, partnering with an indirect procurement utility with deep category expertise and a real-time contracting data repository can turbocharge savings realization.
The Procurement Maturity Model is a valuable tool designed as a self-assessment for health systems to gauge their performance in indirect spend management. This multi-faceted model, born out of our collective experience spanning decades and a deep understanding of healthcare procurement’s nuances, offers a dynamic yet structured framework for health systems to self-grade their procurement capabilities and identify areas for improvement.
The Procurement Maturity Model transcends traditional cost-cutting measures. Instead, it encourages a holistic approach that delves into the nuances of indirect procurement, highlighting the potential for:
The Procurement Maturity Model is structured as a simple matrix, categorizing procurement capabilities, such as procurement scope, spend visibility, category expertise, talent, and contract coverage, across varying maturity levels—from foundational learning stages to pinnacle world-class practices. This framework enables healthcare leaders to discern their current standing within the procurement maturity spectrum and devise strategic plans for progression. The Procurement Maturity Model emphasizes the importance of self-diagnosis in understanding where an organization stands and where it needs to go, fostering a growth mindset rather than complacency.
Within the Procurement Maturity Model, organizations can dynamically assess and scale the current scale of operation and the strategic focus areas needed to support their organization toward the highest possible level of maturity. Examples of maturity levels reflect the following experiences and performance:
Crucially, the Procurement Maturity Model encourages a customized approach. You don’t have to strive for world-class status in every category. Instead, use the model to prioritize based on your unique needs and goals strategically. Use the accompanying visual to pinpoint your organization’s current position and chart a course for sustainable progress.
Establishing a robust indirect procurement function requires not only a substantial commitment of time and resources, but it also demands a firm commitment from the highest levels of leadership within the organization. This commitment is especially critical from key figures such as the Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer.
The journey towards procurement excellence requires a nuanced approach to managing long-standing relationships with preferred vendor partners, often kept by CIOs, CHROs, and VPs of support services. To ensure success without compromising on strategy, content, or control over qualifications, it is essential that these senior leaders proactively involve procurement professionals at the initial stages of sourcing, contract negotiation, and procurement processes. Only through such a collaborative and strategic approach can the organization hope to achieve optimal outcomes.
Often, health system leaders will only delegate decision-making when there is a strong and consistent directive from senior leadership. Their reluctance often stems from concerns — some valid, others less so — regarding the procurement team’s understanding of the specific needs of their functional area and the unique aspects of the products and services being procured. Consequently, business owners may limit the involvement of the procurement office to essentially cleaning up after the vendor partner has been chosen and the critical terms have been established by them.
Determining whether to build this robust indirect procurement function or partner with an outside firm presents a significant challenge. In healthcare, organizations tend to favor the “build” approach despite only a handful of organizations notably thriving by adopting a parochial strategy. Achieving success in this area demands not just time, but also a substantial commitment of resources, which few healthcare organizations have the patience and resources committed to meet these requirements.
Requirements of a robust indirect procurement function include:
Health systems, ranging from the largest IDNs and academic medical centers to rural community hospitals, have advanced supply chain and procurement strategies since they were sequestered in the hospital basements. Today, leaders in these areas often sit at the executive table, influencing important strategies and difficult conversations about physician preference items.
Despite marked progress in the procurement function over the years, procurement’s influence hasn’t extended to non-clinical spending. Using the Procurement Maturity Model, state-of-the-art health systems predominate in the Learning or Emerging stages of development, with the lowest scores across staffing, use of indirect category specialists, and benchmarking outside of healthcare.
Cleveland Clinic stands ahead of most health systems in clinical outcomes, research, as well as indirect procurement. Notably, Gartner has named Cleveland Clinic the best healthcare supply chain for three consecutive years, and assessed in the Procurement Maturity Model, the organization stands out with a Leading designation.
Cleveland Clinic does many things well, not the least of which is indirect procurement. A hallmark of its approach is a sizable investment in procurement specialists dedicated to specific indirect categories. Similarly, Cleveland Clinic operates at a world-class level in terms of staffing. Most health systems devote a few professionals to indirect procurement or have their staff split time between direct and indirect categories.
No healthcare organization exists in isolation. Strategic partnerships with an indirect procurement utility, with category experts, a real-time contract data repository, and robust technology built for indirect procurement can bridge the gap and drive significant value. External benchmarking is where the Clinic recognizes the value of a procurement partner, particularly a partner with access to data outside the healthcare industry. Indirect spending categories are not unique to healthcare, with most indirect products and services being procured by organizations across sectors from the same or similar suppliers.
Understanding what non-healthcare organizations spend for the same or similar products and services is vital to effective sourcing.
The Procurement Maturity Model is more than just a self-assessment tool; it’s an invitation to transform. By embracing its guidance, health system supply leaders can:
Adopting the Procurement Maturity Model positions health systems to efficiently manage their indirect spending, enhance their operational effectiveness, and contribute to their overall success and performance.