Invisible corporate waste- How it happens.

Article 1 of a Series on the How to Reset/Reboot my firm’s operational objectives and cost structure

How do Corporate Operational and Technology Cost Get Out of Control?

 For the past 30 years I have operated software and technology companies and assisted private equity and investors with evaluating and acquiring firms in the entertainment, technology, nonprofit and transportation industries.  From initial due diligence, to the setting of new corporate objectives and goals, I have facilitated the implementation of strategies and controls to reduce risk, restructure cost, and streamline operations. Throughout these transitions I have learned that most of the strategic objectives I have implemented, and their eventual success or failure, all started and ended with people – executives, staff, vendors, and consultants – who were already directly or indirectly associated with the acquired company. Different personalities, misconception, defensive posture, inexperience, and natural biases are generally the root cause of many of the ailments affecting overspending. In the current employment environment, everyone has a specific title and/or role, thus leading to rigid structure in process without observation of alternatives. It is natural that long-term management of any business department or sector can causes blindness due to the daily minutia, this is human nature.  This along with our inherent lack of time is one of the largest contributors to this mindset.  When someone is stretched for time, they are less likely to be concerned with looking for cost savings and improvement in efficiency of their actions, so much as just being concerned with the daily grind of completing all their tasks.  It is important to understand that all companies and employees – even the best ones– have vulnerabilities and areas they can improve on.  Working with one’s staff to overcome these pre-misconceptions is not always easy, but in the long run worth the time investment. 

 

When I first begin diligence of a new company for acquisition, I am always looking for opportunities to rescale and improve efficiency. Even though the process of a M&A transactions always allows for air cover to reset corporate usage of resources, I am always intrigued by the reasons executives and managers often have do not made changes on their own, even when they are financially struggling.  Post M&A transaction, most employees are expecting some restructuring changes to be made to satisfy projected performance requirements by investors. This alone is generally enough motivation to proceed and evaluate corporate expenses. It is, however, very difficult to do much more than scratch the surface, unless there is a concerted effort to engage and partner with existing management and staff.  To significantly move the needle on overall cost savings many people within the organization need to be involved and working on the problem. Many times, existing staff fear the risk of upsetting normal operations, over the benefit of making changes that could improve their effectiveness. Corporate culture needs to shift to allow decision makers to be more comfortable with looking for and making those improvements.  I have watched executive management attempt to brand themselves and motivate changes in behavior by telling staff to “think like a startup would.”  Unfortunately, this is the worst perspective to take, as in most cases, it is not the costs that you initially contract for that are the problem, it is the costs that have aged themselves away from their initial objectives. Many times this happens faster than anyone counts on.

 

Even for those companies that are not in transition, there are many lessons that they can learn and apply from utilizing techniques that new ownership and management would apply to measure performance more broadly.  Many people ask me, “How do I know if my company spending is within reason?” Many consultants and advisors will make general comparisons to industry metrics by industry. While these statistics can be helpful when viewing your corporate spending from thirty-six thousand feet, these statistics can be horribly inaccurate when evaluating your own company up close. An example of this is IT spending by industry. A 2019 report from Computer Economics reviled retail spending in IT can be between 1.2-3.0% of revenue while financial services can be 4.4-11.4% of revenue. It becomes clear that each of these industries have a wide variance even within their own industry of more than 200%, and between different industries of up to 380%. Statistics are only useful as very general guidelines but are useless as precise measurement tools.

More important than trying to stay within industry standards is taking the time to look at actual spending and determine if each item is appropriate.  Identifying how to improve each spending area should include understanding what weakness contributed to the imbalanced spending in the first place. Contributors to this problem can be varied and compounded, including but not limited to, lack of analytic tools, misguided bid management process, weak vendor management programs, no auditing and analysis of spending, buying the wrong products and services, working with the wrong vendors to supply a specific item, becoming victim of unilateral vendor agreements, and lack of sufficient resources. Resolving any one of these issues has the potential of uncovering large hidden saving and resources for the company.

During normal corporate operations, real in-depth review is normally only applied to RFP’s and vendors qualifications the first time a contract is requested. Analyst studies predict that the vast majority of a typical company’s vendor service bills are never audited and are simply paid. Major expense solutions providers like SAP/Concur say that that almost 20% of expenses fall outside of policy.  After properly auditing bills, many find they are paying items that are unnecessary.   They may discover items like a multitude of cellular phone lines that are no longer being used and need to be disconnected or living with an outdated and expensive service contract.  A company may realize the special pricing they negotiated for their network connectivity has expired and they are paying above industry standards. Additionally, they may learn they are paying for expensive industry licenses or publications for employees that are no longer with the company. Making sure to regularly review and evaluate all large expenditures in detail is an important step in reducing overall costs.

Another area of excessive spending can occur when companies do not have detailed corporate spending policies in place, such as spending limits and preapproved supplier relations.  These can be a large source of cash flow bleeding. According to a 2016 research report by The Hackett Group, a Miami-based business consultancy, on the website Supply Chain Management an estimated 29% of indirect spend is off-contract and unexpected spending levels and can reach as high as 80% of total spend in some organizations. Additionally, as many as 50% of companies that do have corporate spending policies and guidelines in place many do not regularly adhere to or monitor their own policies.

Even from the point an RFP contract is signed it is almost guaranteed that there will be many requirement changes before usage or implementation begins. Research shows that by the time implementation of a technology contract occurs, operational requirements can quantitatively shift up to 10-15% without the vendor or company being aware of the shift, according to a 2018 Computer Economics article. Flexibility in contracts that can allow for shifts in company usage and size are a must, and will allow the company to adjust to these changes.

The largest risk for a variance between required and contracted spending is during contract renewal. It is very difficult for departments to predict true supply usage requirements, but it is even more difficult to test actual usage. To further complicate matters many departments and managers will tend to overstate their requirements and usage to reduce the risk of losing already approved budget. There for as much scrutiny and diligence that went into the signing of the original contract should be applied to its renewal.

The more complicated the needs and requirements of a department get, the more risk there will be a significant discrepancy between the contracted products and services and the products and services used. Technology is an excellent example of this. I have seen companies double their telecom hardware maintenance cost by simply not understanding what software and services they licensed versus what they used. This same issue exists for any software licenses and service that is contracted.  Microsoft Enterprise agreements are a perfect illustration of this. Without engaging in a corporate use study, a company can be significantly misaligned with its licensing cost.  An example of this is contracting for full Microsoft Office licenses on every computer owned by the company, when many employees might only use Word and/or Outlook. This complication deepens when analyzing server client licenses due to the many different models Microsoft will allow for usage.

A lot of these issues are due to “set it and forget it” corporate practices. Financing, leasing, and long term licensing are giant contributors to leakage in these areas. Many senior executives do not engage in the process of evaluating how effectively used large capital expenditures are post acquisition. Rescaling a company’ financing, production and fixed asset usage should be a regular auditing process in any medium to large organization. Information technology, aircraft, transportation and manufacturing spending should be regularly analyzed and rebalanced with contractual obligations. Leaving doors open to corporate rescaling is everything when trying to be efficient and nimble.

In the end, approaching how company resources should be spent and managed may be in many cases the largest issue facing corporate profitability. It is very hard sometimes for corporate executives to fully understand, or even want to manage this detail. There are generally many tedious steps to being able to analyze usage against contractual obligations. Many times, it takes obtaining information from several employees in different departments to coordinate information to obtain the appropriate information to make the required decisions.  Each one of these obstacles makes it more tempting for executives, and employees alike, to go with the status quo and keep their usual spending patterns. However, taking the extra steps to reducing, eliminating and managing unnecessary cost and expenditure is the key to increasing corporate profits during economic booms and sustaining longevity during eventual downturns.  

Blockchain

Published December 12 2018

Whenever a new and exciting technology is introduced there is an inevitable overreaction.  Even when the technology is a genuine harbinger of change, people will oversell its capabilities and the extent of its impact.  The ridiculous hype surrounding the Google Glass’ initial announcement in 2012 demonstrates this principle.  While augmented reality is a legitimate emerging field with legitimate applications, hindsight proves that the Google Glass was not to bring the revolution it promised.  Blockchain and other distributed ledger technologies are the latest technology to be oversold to the public with this kind of propagandistic hype.  While blockchain does legitimately promise much, it is important to carefully compare what it is actually capable of accomplishing to the promises of those who would take advantage of the unaware.

Consultants sell the potential of blockchain to firms by taking advantage of the lack of understanding of a new and complicated technology.  They use blockchain as a buzzword, blindly generalizing the success of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin to completely unrelated endeavors.  Reuters recently found that companies that changed their names to include the word “blockchain” on average found their share prices rise threefold.  They compared the blind hysteria to a similar study by Purdue in 2001 that saw companies changing their names to include “.com” or “internet.”  Pursuit of this sort of short-sighted growth is what caused the dot-com bubble and subsequent crash.

Even in cases where a firm is considering legitimate use of blockchain, it is important to consider whether their circumstances are conducive to the success of a distributed ledger.  A distributed ledger is an expensive proposition.  Traditional centralized ledgers have the advantage of not requiring the extensive computing power devoted to the validation of activity on distributed ledgers.  In its most extreme case this costly validation process results in Bitcoin alone using more energy in upkeep than 159 of the world’s nations.  Additionally, a distributed ledger is of little use to a single company.  Effective distributed ledgers require a large number of participants to prevent malicious attacks and fraud.  A distributed ledger is most useful to a whole collection of companies within an industry.  In fact one of the most promising potential uses of blockchain is in trade finance and supply chain management.  With many parties, in many jurisdictions, dealing in many goods, using many documents, a distributed ledger allows for more efficient and transparent transactions.

Lastly, it is important to note that not all technologies have an immediate impact.  Even in cases where blockchain is the ideal solution to the problems faced by an industry, it might not be practical to implement.  A large shift in both culture and organization is required for any organization seeking to implement a distributed ledger.  It is not always practical to rip up the very foundations of a company’s infrastructure, even in the most ideal of circumstances. 

Blockchain has the potential to make radical changes to the way we store and share information, but it is not going to make these changes today, tomorrow, next month, or even next year.  It will likely be decades before the impact of distributed ledger technology is fully felt.  While it may be tempting to look at blockchain and other promising new technologies as an immediate fix for the needs of an organization, it is important to see them as changes to plan for in the long term. 

Alibaba- Real meaning to US investors and consumers

Published September, 18, 2014

In a society driven by finding the “next big thing”, are Americans jumping too far ahead by investing in Alibaba, the “next eBay”? Made up of internet based e-commerce businesses, Alibaba China has now expanded onto the global level and people are rushing to get a hold of Alibaba’s record-breaking IPO. Underwriters had the option to purchase additional shares at the IPO price of $68 while bankers bought an additional 48 million American depositary shares. Alibaba sold more shares due to its “greenshoe” option, which allows underwriters to help investor demand by getting more shares at the IPO price. These prices are proof that US shares are over-valued which could be potentially detrimental to the economy. At some point the US stock market will most likely start to fall, bringing Alibaba shareholders and the rest of the economy down with it.

Most shareholders aren’t even properly informed of what they are buying, thus oversimplifying Alibaba in a dangerous manner.

Bert Dohmen points out in Forbes that people think they are buying shares in Alibaba China when actually they are getting pieces of paper in Alibaba Holdings Cayman Islands (known as a VIE or variable interest entity). Investors aren’t getting a share in Alibaba assets or shareholder rights, only a share in the profits. This brings up the question of who is actually controlling the company and getting away with selling these VIE’s, Alibaba founder and successful Chinese CEO Jack Ma.

CEO Jack Ma has proven himself to be the most successful CEO in China as Alibaba is now the largest online merchant in the world with $240 billion in merchandise sold in 2013. The company began in 1999 when Ma created the site as a way to connect Chinese manufacturers with overseas buyers.

But Alibaba lacks independent board members. There is no supervision, no checks and balances, no way to guarantee that companies will not be defrauded enough money to cause serious damage. Ma has already made moves without included big shareholders Yahoo and Softbank, moving the payment system from a company in which the companies held shares into Alipay without consulting them and thus losing both companies significant finances. What’s stopping Ma from doing something like this again? Proponents of Alibaba keep comparing the company to that of Amazon or eBay as a means of establishing the company and the CEO’s credibility.

If we’re making this comparison however, there is something important to point out. The Economist writes that the founders of eBay used to say that their real accomplishment was neither their clever technology nor the marketplace they created. Instead, it was to build trust between people who have never met.

Can we trust Alibaba? It’s hard to tell.

The company is surrounded by controversy. Alibaba.com has a Gold Supplier membership to try to ensure that the sellers are genuine. The way this Gold Supplier program works is that traders on the website pay a fee and submit to third-party checking in order to potentially be labelled as “gold” suppliers. This let buyers know that the seller is credible.

Alibaba’s corporate office admitted in 2011 that it had granted this membership to more than a thousand dealers which turned out to be defrauding buyers. More than 100 sales staff and a number of supervisors and sales managers were directly responsible for allowing these dealers to evade controls. The firm’s shares dropped nearly 15% after the announcement. If something like this happens again, the outcome would be far more disastrous.

We need to look at what exactly is the long term success of Alibaba and if this sort of globalization is worth losing the safety and control of the American economic system.

Sources:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/investor/2014/09/19/alibaba-ipo-day-recap-run-jack-run/

http://www.economist.com/node/18233750

http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2014/09/22/alibabas-i-p-o-raises-25-billion-to-set-global-record/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0

http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2052971,00.html