The NAM Role being sidelined by events.....?
By
Brian Moore, Global
Retail Consultant and CEO
of
EMR-NAMNEWS
Given
trade
concentration increasing, and major customers undergoing
fundamental change at all levels (think CEO rotation,
possible sell-off of Sainsbury’s and Asda, for a start),
all at a time of unprecedented financial pressure on
supplier-retailer relationships, it is possible that the
NAM role may be in danger of being sidelined…
Whilst
strong functional experts have emerged within the
supplier-customer relationship, their dialogue with the
retailer is essentially one-on-one and
‘function-specific’. This can be a benefit when
NAM-Buyer relationships break down, in that the overall
business relationship can continue to operate on a
functional basis. However, as these one-on-one links
become stronger, the risk of distortion and imbalance
increases, as do the chances of important issues
becoming ‘orphans’ when things go wrong...
It is
perhaps worth remembering that the NAM role has been
designed to be multilevel and multifunctional,
coordinating all aspects of the supplier-retailer
relationship, managing a business unit subset of the
supplier organisation, like a brand manager manages a
brand. This business unit management role extends to
‘educating’ functional team members on the priorities
and working parameters in dealing with the account.
Because the NAM has no line authority over in-house
experts, all such guidance has to be transmitted by
persuasive means, a core skill in national account
management.
Because
of the increasing involvement of many different
stakeholders, all operating to function-based agendae,
there is a growing need for a single coordinating
influencer, driving a sound customer strategy via high
level interpersonal relationships, a pre-requisite of
good account management. In addition, a functional
expert takes a total company view of their functional
output, such as logistics for all customers, finance for
all customers, etc. However, the NAM is the only person
who thinks of all functions as they relate to a single
customer.
The role
is further complicated by the fact that the NAM needs to
understand the retail version of colleagues’ functional
roles in order to liaise effectively with the customer
and facilitate collaborative behaviour. For this
reason, getting to know and fully understand in-house
functional needs will make it easier to appreciate how
that function translates into retail, another aid to
optimising the relationship.
In other
words, in the NAM role, both companies have the
potential benefit of one brain totally dedicated to
optimising the supplier-retailer relationship,
24/7…albeit with total responsibility, and little
designated authority. Obviously, a NAM has to win
sufficient status and authority via quality thinking,
and strategy implementation, all by persuasion of the
stakeholders.
When it
comes to needs-based persuasion, it soon becomes obvious
that the NAM is the only ‘seller’ in the mix, in that
all other roles are ‘buyers’ of ideas. Therefore, the
NAM has to understand the potential functional
contribution to customer profitability and work back to
the job needs of each colleague. This then provides a
basis for helping the functional colleague to contribute
optimally to the supplier-customer relationship. In
other words, NAMs help their colleagues to meet their
functional needs via the customer.
Given
that the functional language-in-common is finance, and
all corporate objectives are ultimately financial, it
seems logical that the NAM role can be ‘rescued’ and
restored to centre-stage by their ability to place all
aspects of the supplier-retailer relationship in a
financial context. This means evolving a customer
strategy that is a sub-set of the overall supplier trade
strategy in terms of Sales, Profit and ideally, Return
on Capital Employed, all captured in the Account P&L.
In
practice, the NAM has to understand the financial
objectives of the retailer and supplier, and the
financial drivers in each stakeholder job-function, at
all levels, within the current market chaos... A NAM
then needs to be able to calculate the cost of each
element of the relationship, and be able to demonstrate
its value in terms of positive impact on the customer’s
P&L.
This
insight, coupled with a grounding in needs-based
persuasion, allows the NAM to optimise the contribution
of each stakeholder to joint profitability, in effect
becoming more valuable by being able to add value.
Negotiation then becomes a give and take process based
upon a fair-share exchange of reciprocal value between
supplier and retailer, all coordinated and even led by
the NAM, ‘a pivotal leader of the cross-functional
relationship with major customers…’
KamTips: Moving the
NAM Role Back to Centre-stage...see
NamNews
July
2010
Date article published: June 2010
