I just read a post called; "Uninstall Now" from what I believe might be a very brave person for even attempting this experiment if you will and I hope he succeeds. I feel that software as we know it is on a cusp and that our computing devices are merely a URL storage device and a browser to allow us to access our tools from anywhere without being tied to software versions and installing upgrades. I have believed for the last 8 years that this was possible and I may even try to join David Rae in this adventure! Good Luck David!
As a side note: NowSource has always been an SaaS model. Design and architecture have fully been based on web accessibility so that users do not worry about updates and versions, they have access to the latest version everyday and with out worry or hassle.
Friday, May 8, 2009
Living Life in the Cloud
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Monday, April 13, 2009
e-Sourcing Tools
This is a great article and basically what I have been saying for years...e-Sourcing Tools — Means to an End by Andy Sealock. The first three paragraphs sum it all up in my mind. e-sourcing tools can have all the functionality in the world but if your processes do not back it up, they might as well be shelfware. I believe this is where NowSource has distinguished itself, as we do not just provide you with a "sourcing application" we review your processes with you and assist in providing the functionality to fit YOUR process. Not too make the process fit the tool. I believe this to be the fundamental difference in our tool vs. other tools on the market.
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Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Day 2 On-Demand Exihibtion
Show floor is picking up right away this morning. Yesterday I met with a purchasing manager of a cooperative buying group that has just recently been organized. So do you think cooperative purchasing is a viable option in the print industry? Co-ops, have waxed and waned over the years but overall cooperative purchasing is a powerful tool to help organizations see real value for their purchasing dollar. Systems like Cross-Wind/NowSource are a means by which product specifications and management of the producers can be controlled by the co-op and still provide easy access for the customer to submit their orders. So again, do you think a co-op environment would work for purchasing print?
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Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Day 1 Wrap-up from On-Demand
Day 1 was a pretty busy day! I did not get a chance to peruse the other exhibitors because we were steady all day in our booth. Show officials stated that the registrations and attendance was on par with last year so it is good to see that attendees and exhibitors were out in full force on day one! If your at the show stop by booth 2411 and say hi! Check back tomorrow as I will have more news regarding Cross-Wind.
John
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On-Demand Day #1
Well I survived show set-up...(I actually did not do a whole lot to help) Having my first morning coffee and getting ready to head over to the show floor. Before I do I thought I would share the latest company news.
UPS Stores/MailBoxes Etc. Will utilize the NowPrint Platform for Online Digital Print stores.
Read more here: http://www.graphicartsonline.com/article/CA6646833.html?rssid=258
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Thursday, February 19, 2009
Going Green in Procurement
I read an interesting article by Tom Jowitt at TechWorld titled Companies fail to go green on procurement. The sad part is that according to his article only 3 percent of companies in the UK are using a non-paper based procurement system. Which leads me to wonder what the statistics might look like in the U.S.? Unfortunately I did not find a lot of data in this area which leads me to believe that if only 3% in the UK that the numbers in the U.S. are probably not much higher. What interested me even more was the statistics related to Printers, Faxes, and other equipment required to produce a paper copy that ultimately produces Carbon Output. not to mention the money saved in electricty alone.
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Friday, January 9, 2009
Software as a Service a more viable option in a down economy
As companies look to reduce costs and spending, technology becomes a stronger and more viable option for companies. Specifically, Software as a Service (SaaS) becomes extremely attractive because it helps to maintain or reduce IT costs in a company. SaaS has been known by many for years, of the benefits, but it seems that companies are just now realizing the true benefit from an internal perspective. SaaS means having the same functions and functionalities that are currently enjoyed without the hassle of maintaining IT infrastructure or staff to maintain hardware and facilities. Actually causing dramatic decreases in cost. For companies that are looking for ways to increase effieciency without increasing costs SaaS systems are highly attractive, especially in today's current economic conditions.
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Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Supplier Performance Scores
Your buyers may be having issues with your suppliers and you may not even know it. How do you know that you are getting what is expected from your suppliers? How do your suppliers know they are doing what is expected? I know, there is that annual survey that my suppliers send out asking how they are doing...but I didn't have time to fill that out for the last 3 years in a row. So I or they don't really know when things are going wrong or right. One of the easiest things to do is to survey your buyers on each purchase order that they cut to the suppliers and then share that informaiton across the organization. It can be quick and easy or complex however, the important piece is to get informaiton to both your suppliers and your buyers on how they are doing. A simple approach is based on Quality, Service, and Price (QSP) or Quality, Service, and Delivery (QSD). Each of these can be very straightforward and can be scored in a percentage environment. The example I like to use is the QSD, Mine looks something like this;
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Thursday, July 3, 2008
Marketings need to track print procurement costs
I was reading a recent article on whattheythink.com by Brian Wolfenden titled: The Future of Print in Marketing Communications. Brian raises a great point in the article; "Today's marketing professionals...They have to make sure that the campaign delivers tangible and quantifiable results quickly. And these results must show a return on investment for the budget they spend on the campaign." Brian goes on in the next paragraph; "As service providers, this offers an opportunity to partner with the marketer to help them produce effective marketing campaigns that have a fresh approach that stresses targeted, customer-centric communications, measurable results and concrete return on investment." These are both excellent points that point back to "Return on Investment."
The key to all of this is knowing what your spend is in the first place and knowing whether or not your getting the best return on that investment. Most companies are still "shooting from the hip" when it comes to tracking spend or evaluating supplier effectiveness. They audit their purchase orders for cost or survey their buyers or buyers of others companies to determine quality delivery from suppliers. All valid tools but time consuming. Tools like Cross-Wind are designed specifically to provide the information to help marketing departments in determining Return on Investment by tracking costs from purchase orders and invoices, and evaluating supplier quality, turnaround, and responsiveness. Getting the best value starts in the estimating phase not in the purchasing phase of a project. In addition, all of these numbers need to come together fast and effectively with your other media spend numbers. Measureable Results...not just in campaign effectiveness but in spend. Am I getting the best quality, delivery, service, and price. You need to have a set of tools in your arsenal that help you to make the best decision regarding return on investment and to do it effectively. It is not a single tool but a set of tools that help you to track the information specific to their areas and then output the data in an effective manner to provide you with a picture of the whole not just a segment. Are you tracking your spend?
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Friday, May 9, 2008
The Importance of Supplier Equipment Lists
Patrick Henry blogged a great article recently on Print CEO about the importance of equipment lists to print buyers. I want to expound on this a bit in that not only is it important but as much information as you can provide about your services and capabilities the better. Our customers find that one of the most important pieces in our system is the ability for the supplier to add their equipment to a master list and the ability for the buyer to sort and look for suppliers with certain capabilities. We give the buyers and suppliers a set of profile tools that give them the flexibility to look for or provide information about Equipment, Products, Users, Quality Managers or Key contacts, and any additional profile information the supplier would like to provide to arm the buyer with as much information about their company as possible. Cross-Wind also allows the buying organization to categorize suppliers based on Minority or Women owned businesses and add regions to their supplier base to allow buyers to look for suppliers in certain regions of the country. Those regions can also be defined by the buying organization to tailor to their specific needs. We are also working with our customers to make the supplier profiles even more interactive to give the most information possible to the buyers including current supplier scoring as determined by the buying organization. Equipment lists are extremely important but so is as much information as a supplier can provide to the buyer to help them make a more informed buying decision. Specialized Procurement Platforms (SSP's) should not be about quoting and buying but about informing the buyer.
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Friday, April 18, 2008
Cross-Wind® uses Flex to manage the project list
Good Morning,
Often times users are not really concerned with what technology or programming language is being used on their system as long as it works. Well sometimes your computer is not "up" on the latest technology and so sometimes your system is working but your computer isn't working with the system. We have had a few calls in recent days saying that when a user logs into Cross-Wind they can see the header of the page and then a blank page below. The reason for this is that Cross-Wind uses a technology called "Flex" and in order to use this you need to do a minor download that you have probably down a few times before but never realized it. Flex requires that your computer has flash player 9 installed in order to view the project list page. So if your a user and login to see a "Blank" page, go to: http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/download.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash
And download the latest version of flash player 9.
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Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Fuel prices impacting print spend?
Appended:
I apparently wrote this before the DOE announced the National average of $3.39 per gallon yesterday afternoon so the news gets better and better! The message is still the same just even more urgent than last week.
According to the Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration, Fuel prices are up 32% over this time last year. From an April 2007 average price of $2.36 per gallon to $3.11 per gallon this week. Diesel Prices currently average $3.95 per gallon up 111 cents since this time last year. Cost of shipping is definitely on the rise, paper is heavy and costly to ship, both to the printer and to the consumer. At the same time personal income has only rose 0.9% in the same period. Companies are taking a hard look at how to cut costs and anything involving freight charges will be scrutinized heavily.
Now is the time to be evaluating print production costs and focus heavily on freight charges.
What is freight costing?
Can I get a better freight cost at the expense of production costs?
Am I better served producing a job closer to the delivery destination?
If you don't have strategic suppliers providing you with cost effective print; YOU ARE LOSING MONEY. No question about it at this point. I would also heavily consider which jobs can be split to make production closer to destination so if you are split shipping consider split production. Ask your suppliers where they are producing if they have multiple facilities and challenge them if they are producing in a plant further from the destination than another plant. Now is not the time to let your suppliers dictate. I believe that the breaking point is very close. The word "Recession" is getting used daily on the news. I heard from a colleague today that his company is now on a hiring freeze. Companies are looking for cost effective ways to measure and source print spend consider looking at sourcing solutions that can help you evaluate based on these and other criteria.
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Friday, April 11, 2008
Change is a GOOD thing?
Change
The seasons change, styles change, presidents change, companies change, processes change. Everything changes, it is how we handle change that makes or breaks us. If you do not handle change well the the print industry is probably NOT the place for you. Changes have been occurring since the first printing press. Almost immediately people started to recognize the value and how they could improve upon it. Of course print buying is much the same in that things are constantly changing. In a pre-recessionary environment companies are looking hard at being efficient and saving money where they can sometimes spending money will make you more efficient and that is a hard concept to grasp. More and more companies are looking these days at how technology and systems in general can help improve efficiency and what it will save them.
We are making changes as well to make our technology more efficient to help print buyers be even more efficient. We have made changes to our project list page to allow users to drag and drop projects and to view pertinent information without having to open the project, giving the print buyer the ability to quickly scan a project and be more up to date. In the coming months we are adding reminder and messaging capabilities to allow the buyer to communicate more directly and quicker with their suppliers. We have even made changes to our website; www.cross-wind.com and we will continue to make changes because our customer base demands that we improve. If you are not riding the wave of change you will certainly find yourself under it. So let's go Surfin!!
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Friday, March 7, 2008
Cross-Wind® Project List New Release
Good Morning,
The latest Cross-Wind enhancement release includes major changes to the Project List page. The Project List page now includes Drag and Drop capabilities within the project list and allows access to project information by highlighting a specific project. Now while you may be thinking whats the big deal? Well this is all being done within a web based application and without going through page refreshes. The is a HUGE deal!. In addition, you can view which vendors have responded to your project without going to the RFQ page. These changes will impact the way you view your projects and will make management easier. Also, included is the ability to view RFQ's that are coming due and to see which projects have supplier responses. All of this functionality will be available on Monday.
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Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Print Oasis 2008 this weekend!
This weekend is Print Oasis 2008 being held at Amelia Island Plantation resort in Amelia Island Florida. The show begins Saturday and runs through Tuesday, with opportunities for Print Buyers and Suppliers to mingle and gain knowledge of the latest happenings in print procurement. This is a great opportunity as well to talk with print buyers from all over the country and gain insight into the needs of print buyers. James Tower will again be exhibiting at the show. I will be there along with one of our sales reps to discuss Cross-Wind and our many other services we provide to print buyers. If you are at the show please stop by and say hi and tell me what you think. You never know you might just get mentioned in my blog! Hope to see you there!!
Information about the show can be found at: www.printoasis.com
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Friday, February 1, 2008
New Customer Implementation for Cross-Wind
I am sitting in the Newark airport after leaving a new customer implementation that I have been on all week. It is Raining and flights are delayed so I thought this the perfect time to update the blog.
I have spent Monday through today in the customers office setting up print product templates to meet the customers specific needs and to add their supplier base and the buyers into Cross-Wind I will try to give you a breakdown of my week and the customers response to all of this.
Day 1
was spent understanding the customers current purchasing processes and mapping out Cross-Wind to fit that process. In addition, I reviewed a demonstration site with the customer to show them how their process would look once their application was set-up. I also added all of the customers suppliers information into the system. One of the great things about Cross-Wind, is the ability for the customer to put their specific vendors in the system.
Day 2
Set-up of modules to fit the customers need, I added the customers buying team and assigned access permissions, from there we reviewed product templates and inserted attributes for the customers templates, we applied pricing structures for their templates and we built the templates to be used.
Day 3
We reviewed the templates and pricing applied to each and then created the product-to-supplier associations. When this was completed we did a final over view of the administration tools and then began a complete walk through with the customer of their application and made minor site adjustments on the fly.
Day 4 TRAINING DAY
8:00 AM we set-up for Buyer training which was split into two sessions to allow for supplier training in between. We trained the buyers in the process of creating a project, specifying the product, selection of suppliers, and submission of the RFQ. At this point the suppliers were receiving quotes within the system and allowing them to begin review so we immediately went into supplier training. The suppliers called in to a conference bridge and a LiveMeeting demo of how to respond to quotes. The supplier training session was completed in one hour and all suppliers were able to login and begin sending responses to our training quotes. After lunch the buyers were trained to review the quotes and how to submit proposals to their customers and how to submit purchase orders back to the suppliers. The buyer and customer training was complete by 3:00 PM and the buyers spent the rest of the day practicing.
Day 5 System Live Day
When the buyers reported to work this morning they began entering live quotes within the system and began receiving quote responses from their supplier base. I answered follow-up questions and helped the buyers with any problems they were having in navigating the system. I thanked everyone for their time and the opportunity to learn another customers processes.
Overall, What a great week! The customer is extremely pleased with how Cross-Wind works and how flexible it is for them. I will follow-up with them most of next week to ensure that it is functioning in the manner they expected and I will return to their location in about 6 weeks to do a follow-up and to show them how to use the custom and scheduled report features. In addition we have tentatively scheduled a 3-day session to implement another of their buying facilities into Cross-Wind in the next 6 weeks. I can't wait to reveal the customers name, but until approvals and finalized contracts are complete I cannot. But it will show how flexible and wide ranging our customer base is.
Well I hope all have a great weekend and It looks like my flight will only be 2 and a half hours delayed!!
John
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Thursday, January 24, 2008
Busy, Busy, Busy, Are you busy too?
Good Morning!
Or is it afternoon I am not sure! It has been a very busy start to 2008 for me. I hope your 2008 is starting out with a bang as well. I was at the Corporate Express National Sales Meeting last week. What a great show! The Keynote speaker was Astronaut Jim Lovell who talked about his experiences on Apollo 13. A very inspiring talk. I got the opportunity to visit with almost all of the Strategic Suppliers for Corporate Express and talk with them about their experiences with Cross-Wind and how it is working for them. Almost all of them were very pleased with how it works and expressed that it helps improve their processes when quoting to their customer. In addition, the Strategic Sourcing supplier manager did a supplier survey in early December asking for the suppliers input and the preliminary analysis is showing that an overwhelming majority of Suppliers are please with the tools. I hope to have the raw data soon and to share that analysis here as well. While the weather wasn't the greatest (Cloudy and rainy Wednesday through Saturday) it sure beat the Minnesota weather I came home too (-10 degrees) on Saturday.
Next week I am off to New Jersey for another customer implementation of Cross-Wind and hopefully I will be able to announce very soon the customers name. I am out of the office all next week but will have some time to start keeping up on this blog! As always if you have questions please feel free to send me a note.
John
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Friday, November 16, 2007
New Customer Implementation
I am doing a new customer implementation in December so I thought I would touch on some of the things that are involved with implementation of Cross-Wind. One of the very first questions I get asked is;
"How long is this going to take?" knowing that everyone's time is extremely valuable a standard implementation of Cross-Wind takes only 5 days (Technically 4 and a half but who's counting?)
"Is there work I need to do before the implementation?" Yes, typically we send a spreadsheet prior to implementation asking for user information to upload to the customers site prior to implementation. This information is typically Buyers, Suppliers, and Customers that will be accessing the system. If the customer already has this information contained in a database or spreadsheet we will clean the information for them and help to fill-in the blanks. One of the other things we ask customers to consider is what products do they associate to which suppliers. This helps us in the building of there custom product templates to know which templates are associated to which suppliers. We also ask our customers to supply us with copies of any forms that they are currently using to spec print so we can develop the product templates to meet their current processes.
"What is the agenda for implementation week?" I won't get into specific detail here but typical implementation consists of understanding the customers current buying process. If the customer has there process clearly defined then this goes very fast. I have spent time in advance of an implementation sitting with the customers buyers to watch how they quote print and to produce a map of the process. This helps in understanding which pieces of Cross-Wind will be needed in the development of the customers application. During implementation week we cover the basic set-up of the site and administration, how to add modules, users, templates, modify existing templates, supplier associations, buyer training, and supplier training.
"How long will it take to do the training?" Buyer training will usually take 4 to 8 hours depending on how quickly and how knowledgeable the buyers are of their processes. Supplier training typically lasts 45 minutes to an hour and a half. Supplier access to the system is very straightforward and easy to use so the suppliers can usually start processing quotes with only an hour of training. The buyer side of the system is more complex because of all of the capabilities the buyer has to specify and request print.
I typically try to schedule implementation to start on Monday morning and will try to get out of the customers office by Friday noon. The customer then has access to myself and our client services staff at no additional charge to ask any questions or walk through any issues they may have. The Call period usually only lasts about two weeks after implementation and the customer is usually very comfortable with using Cross-Wind after that. We also provide user guides and online help to our customers and their suppliers.
Thanks for taking the time to read this and if you have questions please contact me.
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Thursday, September 27, 2007
Are Reverse Auctions good for the Print Industry?
So the question has come up again; "does Cross-Wind do Reverse Auctions?" My biggest concern is why are buyers so infatuated with reverse auctions? I find it hard to believe that anyone in the print industry would even consider these. Have the lessons not been learned? I really would like further feedback on this from the print supplier/printers perspective.
I can tell you that I have personally sat in on reverse auctions with a printer, as an observer and I can tell you it was quite painful for the print supplier. The auction was a long duration auction lasting 3 days. The supplier reviewed the specifications and had questions as did other suppliers apparently by the feedback response that was given to the questions. Of course no one really wants to ask a question about the specs on an open forum as that may give away something none of the other bidders had considered and if the customer is not accepting questions any other way then the questions often go unanswered. The specifications in the suppliers eyes were not complete so therefore they felt they were unable to provide the best pricing and without being able to consult directly with the customer the price would not be complete. Also pricing did not start coming in to the auction site until the last 3 or 4 hours and then got really heated in the last few minutes which by looking at the price differences that printers were providing there was margin the whole time. In addition, the customer was fairly savy in that they were using a ringer. They had a supplier that truly had no intention of doing the job but was there strictly to drive the price as low as possible. Every time pricing was submitted the ringer would respond within a minute or two and counter the price by a percentage point. So if a print supplier was truly interested in the job they were forced to drop the price even further if they wanted it. The print supplier I was working with had decided early on that they were not going to get the work and that this was a waste of their time. The supplier estimated the job with their standard markup, a discounted price, and with their cost. When the auction started he offered up his discount price immediately which was a 0.5% profit margin. Within an hour he countered with his cost price which meant no profit on the job. One minute later the ringer countered that price which would have put the print supplier at a 1% loss. The right thing to do for the printer would have been to walk away at that point. However the printer knew e needed to fill the press and chose to go .5% lower (now at a 1.5% loss.) With a half hour left in the auction another supplier countered his offer. The printer while frustrated chose at this point to walk away from the job. Now once the price went below cost the printer spent most of his time that afternoon trying to run different scenarios as to how they could cut cost on the project to win the bid. This was a very painful experience for the supplier as they met and engaged the production department and pre-press in devising ways that cost could be trimmed, but without the answers or the ability to ask questions of the customer their was no way to respond without taking a complete loss on the project. The supplier walked away frustrated and realized later how much time was truly wasted in trying to respond blindly to the auction. This supplier politely turned down the next invitation to a reverse auction for this customer, and when the customer called to ask why, they politely told them that if this was the way they intended to do business from now on that they were not interested in being a supplier for them.
The customer lost out on having a consultative resource available to them. The bottom line for the supplier was that if doing business meant doing it at a loss they were not willing to risk losing their company to satisfy a customers need to save money. There is a balance and companies are in business to make money.
What are your thoughts? I am interested in hearing what Printers and Print Buyers think regarding using and completing Reverse Auctions. Post your comments! All will be posted. Thanks!
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Wednesday, September 19, 2007
DMIA Print Solutions Conference and Expo
The DMIA Print Solutions Expo is just around the corner. This year the Conference and Expo are being held in glamorous Las Vegas on October 17 - 19. At the Las Vegas Convention Center. This is a great opportunity for print distributors and buyers to hear the latest about technologies and processes in the print industry. I was at last years event in Chicago and was just overwhelmed with all of the exhibits and opportunities to hear some great insights. This year I am going to put a little different twist in my attendance, I am planning to blog right from the floor of the exhibition center. You got it live and on the scenes coverage of the conference sessions, and the exhibit hall. I plan to blog about the sights and sounds and the insights from the attendees.
I would like to know; What sessions you think I should attend, what exhibitors should I talk to and discuss in my blog, and what questions should I ask. Here's how you can help? If you click on the questions link you can fill out the form and I will ask the questions of the suppliers or attendees and post responses back here. You can find all of the information including exhibitors and sessions at: www.printsolutionsshow.com. If you are attending the show stop by at booth 1012 and say hi! I love to hear readers thoughts and would love to discuss them with you. I will post more information as we get closer to the show.
I encourage anyone that has the opportunity to take advantage of attending this show. There are always a lot of great suppliers and a great opportunity to learn more about the print and print services industries. It is a great opportunity to go to these shows for me and discuss procurement and sometimes show Cross-Wind. I hope to see you all there!
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