Diapositivas de presentación en PowerPoint de adquisiciones

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Características de estas diapositivas de presentación de PowerPoint:

Presentando diapositivas de presentación de adquisiciones. Esta plataforma cubre todas las áreas principales del proceso de adquisición. Destaca todos los aspectos importantes del tema. Esta completa presentación se compone de increíbles imágenes, iconos, gráficos y plantillas. Nuestros diseñadores han elaborado esta presentación con una investigación exhaustiva. Estas diapositivas se pueden personalizar fácilmente. Puede agregar o eliminar el contenido según sus requisitos. Compatible con todo tipo de pantallas y monitores. Soporta Google Slides. Soporte al cliente premium disponible. Puede obtener acceso a esta presentación de adquisiciones diseñada profesionalmente y confeccionada con un solo clic. Descárgalo ahora.

Contenido de esta presentación de Powerpoint


Diapositiva 1 : esta diapositiva presenta las adquisiciones. Indique el nombre de su empresa y comience.
Diapositiva 2 : Esta diapositiva presenta la estructura de la estrategia de adquisiciones en una forma jerárquica que describe: estrategia organizativa, estrategia de adquisiciones, estrategia de fabricación, gestión de relaciones con proveedores, gestión de transacciones, abastecimiento estratégico, gestión de calidad, manufactura ajustada, gestión de inventario.
Diapositiva 3 : Esta diapositiva muestra los pasos de adquisición que describen: comprensión de sus objetivos, análisis de datos, inicio del proceso de fijación de precios, gestión del proceso de fijación de precios, ejecución, servicio continuo.
Diapositiva 4 : Esta diapositiva representa el proceso de flujo de trabajo de adquisiciones que describe: identificación de necesidades, redacción de especificaciones (TOR / SOW), elección de un método de adquisición, preparación de documentos de solicitud, evaluación de ofertas, búsqueda, claridad y cierre de ofertas, comité asesor sobre aprobación de adquisiciones, adjudicación del contrato , Negociar el Contrato, Gestionar el Contrato, Evaluar la Adquisición.
Diapositiva 5 : Esta diapositiva presenta la estrategia de adquisiciones que describe los insumos y los productos. Los subtítulos de entrada incluyen datos de unidades de negocio, datos económicos / de mercado y datos financieros corporativos, mientras que los subtítulos de salida incluyen datos de previsión de gastos, operaciones y beneficios / impacto presupuestario.
Diapositiva 6 : Esta diapositiva muestra el enfoque de adquisiciones que describe la estrategia de adquisiciones, la especificación, la presentación, la evaluación y las negociaciones contractuales con imágenes y cuadros de texto relativos.
Diapositiva 7 : Esta diapositiva muestra la formulación de la estrategia de adquisiciones, que además muestra: datos comerciales, datos económicos, datos financieros, operaciones, pronóstico de gastos e impacto en los ingresos.
Diapositiva 8 : Esta diapositiva representa la creación de una estrategia de adquisiciones con: configuración de dirección, procesos de gestión, procesos de trabajo, estrategia, organización, cultura, gestión del desempeño, tecnología, contratación de estrategias, logística, desarrollo de proveedores, adquisiciones transaccionales.
Diapositiva 9 : Esta diapositiva muestra el Marco de estrategia de abastecimiento de servicios que describe: Qué abastecimiento, Cómo abastecerse, Dónde abastecerse y Cómo administrar el abastecimiento global con cuadros de texto adicionales para acompañar.
Diapositiva 10 : esta diapositiva muestra los iconos de Adquisiciones.
Diapositiva 11 : esta diapositiva se titula Diapositivas adicionales para avanzar. Puede cambiar el contenido según sus necesidades.
Diapositiva 12 : Esta es una diapositiva de gráfico combinado con una comparación de tres productos.
Diapositiva 13 : Esta es la diapositiva de Nuestra misión con imágenes y cuadros de texto para acompañar.
Diapositiva 14 : Esta es la diapositiva de Nuestro equipo con nombres y designaciones.
Diapositiva 15 : Esta es una diapositiva de Bombilla o Idea para enunciar una nueva idea o resaltar especificaciones / información, etc.
Diapositiva 16 : Esta es una diapositiva de agradecimiento con dirección # número de calle, ciudad, estado, número de contacto, dirección de correo electrónico.

FAQs for Procurement

So here's what's worked for me - start with a solid needs assessment, then research vendors and pick one. After that comes contract negotiation and ongoing management. Oh, and don't skip the procurement planning phase upfront! I know it seems boring but trust me on this one. Set up evaluation checkpoints along the way so you can pivot if things go sideways. The real trick is assigning clear owners and deadlines for each stage. Otherwise you'll be stuck in procurement hell for months. Map out these stages first, then get someone to own each piece.

Look, tech can totally transform your procurement game. Manual stuff like purchase orders? Gone - automation handles that. E-procurement platforms show you exactly where money's going and track how suppliers are actually performing. The AI demand prediction thing is honestly pretty wild - it'll tell you what to order and when. Your team can browse digital catalogs way faster than calling around for quotes. Biggest payoff though? Way fewer mistakes, plus your people can focus on building actual relationships with suppliers instead of drowning in paperwork. Trust me, it's worth the switch.

Dude, SRM is basically what separates good procurement from just buying stuff. You build real relationships with suppliers and they'll hook you up with better deals, jump you to the front of the line when shit hits the fan, plus they'll pitch new ideas to you first. I've seen suppliers work weekends just because they actually liked working with someone. It's way more than just transactions - think of it like business friendships where everyone wins. Honestly, just start with your top 3 suppliers and set up regular coffee chats or calls this month.

Oh man, this is such a classic trade-off situation! Centralized procurement gets you way better deals because you're buying everything in bulk - the savings can be pretty nuts. But your teams will probably hate you because everything takes forever to approve. Decentralized is the opposite - departments can move fast and pick suppliers that actually make sense for what they're doing. Though honestly, you'll definitely spend more money overall. Really comes down to whether you need to cut costs right now or if speed matters more for hitting your deadlines.

Check their finances first - you don't want suppliers going bankrupt on you. Look at their track record with other clients and make sure their cybersecurity isn't garbage, especially if they're touching your data. Natural disasters and political drama can screw everything up, so think about location too. Site visits are clutch when you can swing them - seeing the actual operation tells you way more than paperwork. Oh, and don't just do this once during setup. Their situation can change pretty quickly, so I'd review everything quarterly to stay on top of things.

Procurement's getting turned upside down by all this sustainability stuff. Companies are picking suppliers based on environmental practices now, even when they're pricier upfront. Regulations and investors are breathing down everyone's necks about it too. The weird thing is some sustainable options actually save money over time - who knew? You've got to weigh carbon footprint and ethical sourcing alongside your usual cost and quality checks. It's become straight-up risk management at this point. I'd start by checking what your current suppliers are actually doing sustainability-wise. That'll show you the biggest gaps pretty quick.

Do your research first - check market rates and dig into their financials before you walk in there. Don't just squeeze them for every penny though, because pissed off suppliers will definitely find creative ways to screw you over later (trust me on this one). Bundle everything together when you negotiate - price, payment terms, delivery schedules, quality stuff. Way better than going item by item. Oh, and write down what you agree on as you go! Get them to confirm the big points before moving on. You don't want those awkward "wait, I thought we said..." moments afterward.

Honestly, analytics beats guessing every time when you're buying stuff for work. Look at your spending patterns first - you'll spot which suppliers actually deliver versus the smooth talkers. Demand forecasting helps you avoid those cringe "sorry, we're out" moments with your team. The cool part? You catch savings opportunities hiding in plain sight. Start simple though - clean up your spend data and hunt for obvious patterns before getting fancy with tools. I mean, why make it harder than it needs to be? Your gut's good, but data's better.

Honestly, locking in longer contracts helps a ton - just make sure you've got some wiggle room built in. Multiple suppliers is clutch too, learned that the hard way during all the supply chain chaos. When prices drop on key materials, stock up a bit (storage costs permitting, obviously). You can also try price indexing so suppliers share some of the risk instead of you eating it all. Oh, and start watching market trends now rather than scrambling later. Diversification really is your friend here - saved my ass more times than I can count.

Honestly, procurement is way more strategic than people think. Your procurement team can make or break your bottom line - better deals and reliable vendors = better margins and smoother operations. It's not just about finding cheap stuff anymore either. They're the ones who'll spot suppliers with cool new tech that could give you an edge. Plus they help spread risk around by not putting all your eggs in one supplier basket (learned that the hard way during COVID supply issues). Get them involved early when you're planning big moves - they know what's actually doable and can optimize your whole sourcing game.

Oh man, where do I start? Budget constraints are brutal. Then you've got compliance stuff that's basically a maze - I swear they make it complicated on purpose. Approval processes take forever too. Limited vendor pools mean fewer options, and don't get me started on the political drama. Everything gets picked apart because it's taxpayer money, so everyone's scared to mess up. The transparency requirements are actually good in theory but make everything harder. Pro tip: get tight with your legal team from day one and document literally everything you do.

Build compliance right into your procurement from the start - don't try to fix it later. First, figure out which regulations hit your industry: anti-corruption stuff, data protection, environmental rules, labor laws. Total maze initially, but it clicks once you map it out. Create approval workflows with compliance checks built in. Train your team on the basics and document everything religiously. Your legal team will be lifesavers here - they'll catch problems before they blow up. Oh, and seriously partner with compliance folks early. They're not the fun police, they're keeping you out of trouble.

So AI and machine learning are totally changing the game right now. They're handling vendor selection automatically, predicting when your supply chain might blow up, and crunching spend data way faster than doing it by hand. Real-time dashboards give you instant visibility into everything. There's also blockchain for transparency, but honestly that's still pretty niche. RPA takes care of boring PO stuff. Smart teams use predictive analytics for better demand forecasting too. Start with automating your most repetitive tasks - that's where you'll actually see results fast.

Oh man, procurement across different cultures is wild. What works perfectly in Germany will bomb spectacularly in Japan - trust me on that one. You've got to completely flip your approach depending where you are. Some places want direct communication, others think that's super rude. Relationship timelines are totally different too. In some countries you're expected to do months of relationship-building before talking business (which honestly can be exhausting but whatever). Then there's all the hierarchy stuff, gift customs, decision-making processes. My advice? Find local partners who actually know the culture inside out. They'll save you from so many awkward moments.

If you're looking at the big names, SAP Ariba and Coupa are solid choices - they handle everything from sourcing through payments. Oracle's good too but honestly feels like overkill unless you're huge. NetSuite works if you're already using their stuff. Smaller budget? Precoro and ProcurePort won't destroy your wallet. Really depends on your company size though. I'd grab demos from maybe 2-3 platforms and see what your team doesn't hate using every day - that's half the battle right there.

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