Are U.S. Corporations Flirting With Economic Suicide by Not Supporting and Helping to Develop Minority-Owned Businesses?
Procurement Systems Must Change: Competitiveness of U.S. Supply Chains Will Falter if Minority Businesses Don't Succeed, Says Expert From The Boston Consulting Group

(firmenpresse) - NEW YORK, NY -- (Marketwire) -- 07/19/11 -- American businesses must make supplier diversity a strategic priority and stop viewing it as simply a corporate citizenship obligation, according to a new book.
"U.S. companies need to do a better job of supporting and developing minority businesses. Minorities will become the majority of the U.S. population by 2045. Therefore, minority businesses need to deliver the value that American corporations expect -- at every level of the supply chain. Right now they do not -- as they are relegated to low-value or peripheral work that does not directly support the corporate value chain," said BCG Senior Advisor , coauthor of (Stanford Business Books, 2011).
"Modern competition pits a corporation's supply chain against rival supply chains, so developing supplier excellence is a management and strategic imperative. Given inexorable demographic shifts, supplier diversity needs to be a strategic priority at just about every large company," he added.
Lowry underscores the following as reasons current approaches to supply chain and minority business development need to change:
The adverse economic impact of minority underachievement will only grow as minorities become a larger and larger portion of the workforce. Their success in creating wealth will determine the fortunes of the nation; so if America does not make minority business success a priority, the U.S. economy is destined to stumble.
Adding supplier diversity to traditional procurement is ineffective, as mandated diversity-spend targets are tactical, not strategic. And in this model, minority businesses are relegated to low-value or peripheral work that does not directly support the corporate value chain. The current procurement approach does nothing to develop the skills, scale, and financial stability necessary for minority businesses to grow into partners that can create and deliver value.
Soon the majority of U.S. suppliers and value-chain partners will be diverse businesses, those owned by women and minorities. So today's C-Suite executives need to see minority businesses as a strategic asset -- ripe for development -- rather than avenues for corporate philanthropy, tools for image building and PR, or mechanisms for meeting outsourcing quotas.
Value chain development is a strategic process, focused on developing outsourcing partners as a substitute for in-house operations. Successful diversity programs need to be managed within this "developmental" paradigm. Leading companies create inclusion, and loyal allies, by developing long-term strategic relationships with minority outsourcing partners -- up to and including equity investments in their suppliers. And these relationships should be developed , not just for non-essential goods and services.
One of the biggest challenges facing minority businesses is cash flow: operations, growth, and R&D all require working capital. Yet large corporations often expect suppliers to deliver immediate value, and then wait patiently for months to get paid. The competitive bidding process also pushes down margins on the "non-essential" work allocated to diversity targets (e.g., janitorial or landscaping services). To make matters worse, minority entrepreneurs have demonstrably more limited access to capital and credit. As a result, diversity programs often do more harm than good -- bankrupting suppliers through low-ball pricing, high delivery demands, and failure to pay.
"We desperately need a new approach to supply chain diversity," said Lowry. "America's competitive edge depends on throwing out an outdated procurement mentality that isn't working -- and in some cases is doing more harm than good. The world has changed, and American corporations need to wake up to that reality. Minority businesses will soon be the chief source of value creation in the supply chain. U.S. companies can embrace that fact and help develop the next generation of outsourcing partners, or risk getting beaten by global competitors."
is a Senior Advisor and former Senior Vice President at The Boston Consulting Group. He is the Academic Advisor for the Kellogg Advanced Management Education Program, a member of the board for the Howard University School of Business, and Chairman of the Howard University Entrepreneurial Center. In 2009, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Minority Supplier Development Council. He is recognized in the Minority Business Hall of Fame.
is Director of Programs for Minority- and Women-Owned Businesses at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. He is the author of Managing Strategic Relationships. His work in helping minority business is reflected in the Lifetime Achievement Award conferred by the Minority Business Development Agency, U.S. Department of Commerce.
The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) is a global management consulting firm and the world's leading advisor on business strategy. We partner with clients in all sectors and regions to identify their highest-value opportunities, address their most critical challenges, and transform their businesses. Our customized approach combines deep insight into the dynamics of companies and markets with close collaboration at all levels of the client organization. This ensures that our clients achieve sustainable competitive advantage, build more capable organizations, and secure lasting results. Founded in 1963, BCG is a private company with 74 offices in 42 countries. For more information, please visit .
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Datum: 19.07.2011 - 12:50 Uhr
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