Today Purchasing Tips: Creative Negotiation With Sole Source - TopicsExpress



          

Today Purchasing Tips: Creative Negotiation With Sole Source Vendors Are You Being Creative Enough In Your Negotiations? Of course a sole source vendor is going to resist your first request for lower prices! So, dont make sole source vendor negotiations a tug-of-war about price. Instead, use creative negotiation to explore exchanging a concession that the vendor values for that lower price. Examples of concessions that vendors value include: faster payments; longer guarantees of getting business; participation as a reference; participation in a case study or testimonial; and simpler, more standardized processes. So, if the lack of competition results in a vendor refusing to grant you the lower price youve requested, ask the vendor questions like What if we... * Paid you in 15 days instead of 30? * Extended the term of the contract for one more year? * Agreed to serve as a reference for you? * Participated in a case study or testimonial for you? * Stopped requiring you to [insert requirement here]? With regard to the special requirement, sometimes we require our vendors to do things for us that none of their other customers require and we fail to consider the additional cost to the vendor which, ultimately, gets passed back on to us. You may not realize that getting that extra physical invoice or customized labeling on your packages or other special request is actually costing your organization far in excess of the value you get from them. If you dont really need it, why pay for it? Of course, before suggesting any of these concessions to a vendor, be sure that your organization could actually support the idea. For example, if your CFO would refuse to pay a vendor in 15 days under any circumstances, then it could be problematic for you to make the offer only to be forced to withdraw it later. In some cases, it might be best to ask the vendor these questions one at a time and let them research their ability to trade a price reduction for one of these concessions before asking your next What if? question. As I always teach in my negotiation training, you dont want to use all of your ammunition at once because if the vendors first price reduction is a small one, youll have no incentive left to offer the vendor for giving you a bigger one.
Posted on: Tue, 28 Jan 2014 09:42:17 +0000

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