Transformed Pricing Is Critical While Comparing Prices From Dis-similar Suppliers

Transformed Pricing Is Critical While Comparing Prices From Dis-similar Suppliers


Procurement teams often face a scenario where they have to compare bids from suppliers that aren’t exactly similar. What do we mean by that?

Here are some scenarios where bids received from suppliers aren’t comparable.

  1. Shipping costs are incurred by the buyer and are different for each supplier i.e. supplier provides goods ex-works and the buyer is responsible for the transportation of goods.
  2. Payment terms are different
  3. Quality and esourcing services levels are different
  4. Switching costs are incurred with a new supplier
  5. Preference is given to incumbent suppliers
  6. plus others


If we need reverse auctions to be conclusive in themselves, then they cannot be applied in such scenarios. This can be a challenge for companies trying to establish reverse auctions as a norm for supplier negotiations.

The way to address this is via Transformed Price bidding. How does that work? The bids placed by suppliers are transformed by applying ‘Price Transformation Factors’, thus normalizing the bids received from suppliers i.e. ‘Transformed Price’.

Illustration:

Let's take an example of a lot of Gears being purchased from 3 suppliers.

Switching Cost is applied to a couple of new vendors, B and C. It’s not applicable to the incumbent Supplier A.


The transformation formula would be:

Transformed Price = Submitted Price + Switching Cost

Here we can see that transformation factors are applied to the prices submitted by suppliers. It does not make sense to shift to the new suppliers though their unit pricing is lower than that of the incumbent supplier.

A suggestion to teams conducting such events is to document the transformation factors and the values for each supplier along with the transformation formula being applied to supplier bids. Additionally, have these documents signed off by the relevant authority. This can be an area of internal audit in the future and the right documentation helps.

It does not end here though. The reverse transformation is then applied to compute one supplier’s bid’s view by other suppliers. In some way, this is similar to how multi-currency bidding works, just a tad more complex.

An added benefit of using Transformed Price bidding is convincing other stakeholders that reverse auction procurement is not just about cost reductions (cost is often perceived to be directly proportional to quality) and that better and more capable suppliers can be given a (fair) advantage.

A suggestion to teams conducting such events is to document the transformation factors and the values for each supplier along with the transformation formula being applied to supplier bids. Additionally, have these documents signed off by the relevant authority. This can be an area of internal audit in the future and the right documentation helps.

Original Source: Transformed Pricing Is Critical While Comparing Prices From Dis-similar Suppliers

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