- As cloud vendors, managed service providers, and other IT vendors continue to play a larger role in IT operations, the VMI must evolve to meet new challenges. Maximizing the VMI's impact requires it to keep pace with the IT landscape and transforming from tactical to strategic.
- Increased spend with and reliance on vendors leads to less control and more risk for IT organizations. The VMI must mature on multiple fronts to continue adding value; staying stagnant is not an option.
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- An organization’s vendor management initiative must continue to evolve and mature to reach its full strategic value. In the early stages, the vendor management initiative may be seen as transactional, focusing on the day-to-day functions associated with vendor management. The real value of a VMI comes from becoming strategic partner to other functional groups (departments) within your organization.
- Developing vendor management personnel is critical to the vendor management initiative’s evolution and maturation. For the VMI to mature, its personnel must mature as well. Their professional skills, competencies, and knowledge must increase over time. Failure to accentuate personal growth within the team limits what the team is able to achieve and how the team is perceived.
- Vendor management is not about imposing your will on vendors; it is about understanding the multi-faceted dynamics between your organization and your vendors and charting the appropriate path forward. Resource allocation and relationship expectations flow from these dynamics. Each critical vendor requires an individual plan to build the best possible relationship and to leverage that relationship. What works with one vendor may not work or even be possible with another vendor…even if both vendors are critical to your success.
Impact and Result
- Evolve the VMI from tactical to strategic
- Improve the VMI’s brand and brand awareness
- Develop the VMI’s team members to increase the VMI’s impact
- Take relationships to the next level with your critical vendors
- Understand how your vendors view your organization as a customer
- Create and implement plans to improve relationships with critical vendors
- Create and implement plans to improve underperforming vendors
Elevate Your Vendor Management Initiative
Transform Your VMI From Tactical to Strategic to Maximize Its Impact and Value
EXECUTIVE BRIEF
Analyst Perspective
Transform your VMI into a strategic contributor to ensure its longevity.
By the time you start using this blueprint, you should have established a solid foundation for your vendor management initiative (VMI) and implemented many or all of the principles outlined in Info-Tech’s blueprint Jump Start Your Vendor Management (the Jump Start blueprint). This blueprint (the Elevate blueprint) is meant to continue the evolutionary or maturation process of your VMI. Many of the items presented here will build on and refer to the elements from the Jump Start blueprint. The goal of the Elevate blueprint is to assist in the migration of your VMI from transactional to strategic. Why? Simply put, the more strategic the VMI, the more value it adds and the more impact it has on the organization as a whole. While the day-to-day, transactional aspect of running a VMI will never go away, getting stuck in transactional mode is a horrible place for the VMI and its team members:
To prevent these tragic things from happening, transform the VMI into a strategic contributor and partner internally. This Elevate blueprint provides a roadmap and guidance to get your journey started. Focus on expanding your understanding of customer/vendor dynamics, improving the skills, competencies, and knowledge of the VMI’s team members, contributing value beyond the savings aspect, and building a solid brand internally and with your vendors. This requires a conscious effort and a proactive approach to vendor management…not to mention treating your internal “clients” with respect and providing great customer service. At the end of the day, ask yourself one question: If your internal clients had to pay for your services, would they? If you can answer yes, you are well on your way to being strategic. If not, you still have some work to do. Long live the strategic VMI! |
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Phil Bode |
Executive Summary
Your Challenge |
Common Obstacles |
Info-Tech’s Approach |
Each year, IT organizations “outsource” tasks, activities, functions, and other items. During 2021:
This leads to more spend, less control, and more risk for IT organizations. Managing this becomes a higher priority for IT, but many IT organizations are ill-equipped to do this proactively. |
As new contracts are negotiated and existing contracts are renegotiated or renewed, there is a perception that the contracts will yield certain results, output, performance, solutions, or outcomes. The hope is that these will provide a measurable expected value to IT and the organization. Often, much of the expected value is never realized. Many organizations don’t have a VMI to help:
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Vendor Management is a proactive, cross-functional lifecycle. It can be broken down into four phases:
The Info-Tech process addresses all four phases and provides a step-by-step approach to configure and operate your VMI. The content in this blueprint helps you and the VMI evolve to add value and impact to the organization that was started with the Info-Tech blueprint Jump Start Your VMI. |
Info-Tech Insight
The VMI must continue to mature and evolve, or it will languish, atrophy, and possibly be disbanded.
- A transactional approach to vendor management ignores the multi-faceted dynamics in play and limits the VMI’s potential value.
- Improving the VMI’s impact starts with the VMI’s personnel – their skills, knowledge, competencies, and relationships.
- Adding value to the organization requires time to build trust and understand the landscape (internal and external).
*Source: Information Services Group, Inc., 2022.
Executive Summary
Your Challenge
Spend on managed service providers and as-a-service providers continues to increase. In addition, IT services vendors continue to be active in the mergers and acquisitions arena. This increases the need for a VMI to help with the changing IT vendor landscape.
38% 2021 |
16% 2021 |
47% 2021 |
Spend on As-a-Service Providers |
Spend on Managed Services Providers |
IT Services Merger & Acquisition Growth (Transactions) |
Source: Information Services Group, Inc., 2022.
Executive Summary
Common Obstacles
When organizations execute, renew, or renegotiate a contract, there is an “expected value” associated with that contract. Without a robust VMI, most of the expected value will never be realized. With a robust VMI, the realized value significantly exceeds the expected value during the contract term.
Source: Based on findings from Geller & Company, 2003.
Executive Summary
Info-Tech’s Approach
A sound, cyclical approach to vendor management will help ensure your VMI meets your needs and stays in alignment with your organization as they both change (i.e. mature and evolve).
Vendor Management Process
- Plan
- Review and Update Existing Plan Materials
- Build
- Vendor Classification Models
- Customer Positioning Model
- 2-Way Scorecards
- Performance Improvement Plan (PIP)
- Relationship Improvement Plan (RIP)
- Vendor-at-a-Glance Reports
- VMI Personnel Competency Evaluation Tool
- Internal Feedback Tool
- VMI ROI Calculation Tools
- Vendor Recognition Program
- Run
- Classify Vendors and Identify Customer Position
- Assess the Relationship Landscape
- Leverage 2-Way Scorecards
- Implement PIPs and RIPS
- Gather Market Intelligence
- Generate Vendor-at-a-Glance Reports
- Evaluate VMI Personnel
- Improve Professional Skills
- Expand Professional Knowledge
- Create Brand Awareness
- Survey Internal Clients
- Calculate VMI ROI
- Implement Vendor Recognition Program
- Review
- Investigate Potential Alliances
- Continue Increasing the VMI's Strategic Value
- Review and Update Governances
- Outcomes
- Better Allocation of VMI Resources
- Measurable Impact of the VMI
- Increased Awareness of the VMI
- Improved Vendor Performance
- Improved Vendor Relationships
- VMI Team Member Development
- Strategic Relationships Internally
Info-Tech’s Methodology for Elevating Your VMI
Phase 1 - Plan |
Phase 2 - Build |
Phase 3 - Run |
Phase 4 – Review |
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Phase Steps |
1.1 Review and Update Existing Plan Materials |
2.1 Vendor Classification Models 2.2 Customer Positioning Model 2.3 Two-Way Scorecards 2.4 Performance Improvement Plan (PIP) 2.5 Relationship Improvement Plan (RIP) 2.6 Vendor-at-a-Glance Reports 2.7 VMI Personnel Competency Evaluation Tool 2.8 Internal Feedback Tool 2.9 VMI ROI Calculation 2.10 Vendor Recognition Program |
3.1 Classify Vendors & Identify Customer Position 3.2 Assess the Relationship Landscape 3.3 Leverage Two-Way Scorecards 3.4 Implement PIPs and RIPs 3.5 Gather Market Intelligence 3.6 Generate Vendor-at-a-Glance Reports 3.7 Evaluate VMI Personnel 3.8 Improve Professional Skills 3.9 Expand Professional Knowledge 3.10 Create Brand Awareness 3.11 Survey Internal Clients 3.12 Calculate VMI ROI 3.13 Implement Vendor Recognition Program |
4.1 Investigate Potential Alliances 4.2 Continue Increasing the VMI’s Strategic Value 4.3 Review and Update |
Phase Outcomes |
This phase helps the VMI stay focused and aligned by reviewing existing materials, updating the existing maturity assessment, and ensuring that the foundational elements of the VMI are up-to-date. |
This phase helps you configure, create, and understand the tools and templates used to elevate the VMI. |
This phase helps you begin integrating the new tools and templates into the VMI’s operations. |
This phase helps the VMI stay aligned with the overall organization, stay current, and improve its strategic value as it evolves. |
Insight Summary
Insight 1 |
An organization’s vendor management initiative must continue to evolve and mature to reach its full strategic value. In the early stages, the vendor management initiative may be seen as transactional, focusing on the day-to-day functions associated with vendor management. The real value of a VMI comes from becoming strategic partner to other functional groups (departments) within your organization. |
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Insight 2 |
Developing vendor management personnel is critical to the vendor management initiative’s evolution and maturation. For the VMI to mature, its personnel must mature as well. Their professional skills, competencies, and knowledge must increase over time. Failure to accentuate personal growth within the team limits what the team can achieve and how the team is perceived. |
Insight 3 |
Vendor management is not about imposing your will on vendors; it is about understanding the multifaceted dynamics between your organization and your vendors and charting the appropriate path forward. Resource allocation and relationship expectations flow from these dynamics. Each critical vendor requires an individual plan to build the best possible relationship and to leverage that relationship. What works with one vendor may not work or even be possible with another vendor – even if both vendors are critical to your success. |
Blueprint Deliverables
The four phases of maturing and evolving your vendor management initiative are supported with configurable tools, templates, and checklists to help you stay aligned internally and achieve your goals.
VMI Tools and Templates
Continue building your foundation for your VMI and configure tools and templates to help you manage your vendor relationships.
Key Deliverables:
Info-Tech’s
- Elevate – COST Model Vendor Classification Tool
- Elevate – MVP Model Vendor Classification Tool
- Elevate – OPEN Model Customer Positioning Tool
- Elevate – Relationship Assessment and Improvement Plan Tool
- Elevate – Tools and Templates Compendium
A suite of tools and templates to help you upgrade and evolve your vendor management initiative.
Blueprint benefits
IT Benefits |
Business Benefits |
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Info-Tech offers various levels of support to best suit your needs
DIY Toolkit |
Guided Implementation |
Workshop |
Consulting |
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“Our team has already made this critical project a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some guidance along the way would be helpful.” | “Our team knows that we need to fix a process, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins along the way would help keep us on track.” | “We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place.” | “Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this project on. We need assistance through the entirety of this project.” |
Diagnostics and consistent frameworks used throughout all four options
Guided Implementation
What does a typical GI on this topic look like?
Phase 1 | Phases 2 and 3 | Phase 4 | |
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Call #1: Review status of existing plan materials. Call #2: Conduct a new maturity assessment. |
Call #3: Review optional classification models. Call #4: Determine customer positioning for top vendors. Call #5: Configure vendor Scorecards and vendor feedback forms. Call #6: Discuss PIPs, RIPs, and vendor-at-a-glance reports. |
Call #7: VMI personnel competency evaluation tool. Call #8: Create internal feedback tool and discuss ROI. Call #9: Identify vendor recognition program attributes and assess the relationship landscape. Call #10: Gather market intelligence and create brand awareness. |
Call #11: Identify potential vendor alliances, review the components of a strategic VMI, and discuss the continuous improvement loop. |
A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization.
A typical GI is between 6 to 12 calls over the course of 3 to 6 months.
Workshop Overview
Contact your account representative for more information.
workshops@infotech.com 1-888-670-8889
Day 1 |
Day 2 |
Day 3 |
Day 4 |
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Plan/Build Run |
Build/Run |
Build/Run |
Run/Review |
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Activities |
1.1 Existing Plan document review and new maturity assessment. 1.2 Optional classification models. 1.3 Customer positioning model. 1.4 Two-way scorecards. |
2.1 Performance improvement plans (PIPs). 2.2 Relationship improvement plans (RIPs). 2.3 Vendor-at-a-glance reports. 2.4 VMI personnel competency evaluation tool. |
3.1 Internal feedback tool. 3.2 VMI ROI calculation. 3.3 Vendor recognition program. 3.4 Assess the relationship landscape. 3.5 Gather market intelligence. 3.6 Improve professional skills. |
4.1 Expand professional knowledge. 4.2 Create brand awareness. 4.3 Investigate potential alliances. 4.4 Continue increasing the VMI’s strategic value. 4.5 Review and update (governances, policies and procedures, lessons learned, internal alignment, and leading practices). |
Deliverables |
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Using complementary vendor management blueprints
Jump Start Your VMI and Elevate Your VMI
Phase 1 – Plan
Look to the Future and Update Existing Materials
Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Phase 4 |
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1.1 Review and update existing Plan materials | 2.1 Vendor classification models 2.2 Customer positioning model 2.3 Two-way scorecards 2.4 Performance improvement plan (PIP) 2.5 Relationship improvement plan (RIP) 2.6 Vendor-at-a-glance reports 2.7 VMI personnel competency evaluation tool 2.8 Internal feedback tool 2.9 VMI ROI calculation 2.10 Vendor recognition program | 3.1 Classify vendors and identify customer position 3.2 Assess the relationship landscape 3.3 Leverage two-way scorecards 3.4 Implement PIPs and RIPs 3.5 Gather market intelligence 3.6 Generate vendor-at-a-glance reports 3.7 Evaluate VMI personnel 3.8 Improve professional skills 3.9 Expand professional knowledge 3.10 Create brand awareness 3.11 Survey internal clients 3.12 Calculate VMI ROI 3.13 Implement vendor recognition program | 4.1 Investigate potential alliances 4.2 Continue increasing the VMI’s strategic value 4.3 Review and update |
This phase will walk you through the following activities:
This phase helps the VMI stay focused and aligned by reviewing existing materials, updating the existing maturity assessment, and ensuring that the foundational elements of the VMI are up-to-date. The main outcomes from this phase are a current maturity assessment and updated or revised Plan documents.
This phase involves the following participants:
- VMI team
- Applicable stakeholders and executives
- Procurement/Sourcing
- IT
- Others as needed
Phase 1 – Plan
Phase 1 – Plan revisits the foundational elements from the Info-Tech blueprint Jump Start Your Vendor Management Initiative. As the VMI continues to operate and mature, looking backward periodically provides a new perspective and helps the VMI move forward:
- Has anything changed (mission statement, goals, scope, strengths and obstacles, roles and responsibilities, and process mapping)?
- What progress was made against the maturity assessment?
- What is next in the maturity process for the VMI?
- Were some foundational elements overlooked or not done thoroughly due to time constraints, a lack of knowledge, or other factors?
Keep an eye on the past as you begin looking toward the future.
Step 1.1 – Review and update existing Plan materials
Ensure existing materials are current
At this point, the basic framework for your VMI should be in place. However, now is a good time to correct any oversights in your foundational elements. Have you:
- Drafted a mission statement for the VMI and listed its goals, answering the questions “why does the VMI exist” and “what will it achieve”?
- Determined the VMI’s scope, establishing what is in and outside the purview of the VMI?
- Listed the VMI’s strengths and obstacles, identifying what you can leverage and what needs to be managed to ensure smooth sailing?
- Established roles and responsibilities (OIC Chart) for the vendor management lifecycle, defining each internal party’s place in the process?
- Documented process maps, delineating (at a minimum) what the VMI is doing for each step of the vendor management lifecycle?
- Created a charter, establishing an operational structure for the VMI?
- Completed a vendor inventory, identifying the major vendors included in the VMI?
- Conducted a VMI maturity assessment, establishing a baseline and desired future state to work toward?
- Defined the VMI’s structure, documenting the VMI’s place in the organization, its services, and its clients?
If any of these elements is missing, revisit the Info-Tech blueprint Jump Start Your Vendor Management Initiative to complete these components. If they exist, review them and make any required modifications.
Download the Info-Tech blueprint Jump Start Your Vendor Management Initiative
1.1.1 – Review and update existing Plan materials
1 – 6 Hours
- Meet with the participants and review existing documents and tools created or configured during Phase 1 of the Info-Tech blueprint Jump Start Your Vendor Management Initiative: mission statement and goals, scope, strengths and obstacles, OIC chart, process maps, charter, vendor inventory, maturity assessment, and structure.
- Update the documents as needed.
- Redo the maturity assessment if more than 12 months have passed since the initial assessment was conducted.
Input | Output |
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Materials | Participants |
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Download the Info-Tech blueprint Jump Start Your Vendor Management Initiative
Download the Jump - Phase 1 Tools and Templates Compendium
Phase 2 – Build
Create New Tools and Consider Alternatives to Existing Tools
Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Phase 4 |
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1.1 Review and update existing Plan materials | 2.1 Vendor classification models 2.2 Customer positioning model 2.3 Two-way scorecards 2.4 Performance improvement plan (PIP) 2.5 Relationship improvement plan (RIP) 2.6 Vendor-at-a-glance reports 2.7 VMI personnel competency evaluation tool 2.8 Internal feedback tool 2.9 VMI ROI calculation 2.10 Vendor recognition program | 3.1 Classify vendors and identify customer position 3.2 Assess the relationship landscape 3.3 Leverage two-way scorecards 3.4 Implement PIPs and RIPs 3.5 Gather market intelligence 3.6 Generate vendor-at-a-glance reports 3.7 Evaluate VMI personnel 3.8 Improve professional skills 3.9 Expand professional knowledge 3.10 Create brand awareness 3.11 Survey internal clients 3.12 Calculate VMI ROI 3.13 Implement vendor recognition program | 4.1 Investigate potential alliances 4.2 Continue increasing the VMI’s strategic value 4.3 Review and update |
This phase will walk you through the following activities:
This phase helps you configure, create, and understand the tools and templates used to elevate the VMI. The main outcomes from this phase are a clear understanding of the tools that identify which vendors are important to you, tools and concepts to help you take key vendor relationships to the next level, and tools to help you evaluate and improve the VMI and its personnel.
This phase involves the following participants:
- VMI team
- Applicable stakeholders and executives
- Legal
- Marketing
- Others as needed
Phase 2 – Build
Create and configure tools, templates, and processes
Phase 2 – Build is similar to its counterpart in the Info-Tech blueprint Jump Start Your Vendor Management Initiative; this phase focuses on tools, templates, and concepts that help the VMI increase its strategic value and impact. The items referenced in this phase will require your customization or configuration to integrate them within your organization and culture for maximum effect.
One goal of this phase is to provide new ways of looking at things and alternate approaches. (For example, two methods of classifying your vendors are presented for your consideration.) You don’t live in a one-size-fits-all world, and options allow you (or force you) to evaluate what’s possible rather than running with the herd. As you review this phase, keep in mind that some of the concepts presented may not be applicable in your environment…or it may be that they just aren’t applicable right now. Timing, evolution, and maturity will always be factors in how the VMI operates.
Another goal of this phase is to get you thinking about the value the VMI brings to the organization, and just as important, how to capture and report it. Money alone may be at the forefront of most people’s minds when return on investment is brought up, but there are many ways to measure a VMI’s value and impact. This Phase will help you in your pursuit.
Lastly, a VMI must focus on its internal clients, and that starts with the VMI’s personnel. The VMI is a reflection of its team members – what they do, say, and know will determine how the VMI is perceived…and used.