Unlock the Secrets of Effective Product Portfolio Management

Nick Verstraete
Jul 3, 2024 3:55:45 PM

Optimizing your product portfolio is a strategic effort that can significantly enhance your company’s profitability and efficiency. By accurately assessing costs and aligning them with real-world scenarios, businesses can streamline operations and make more informed decisions.

To help you make this journey, I’ll take you on a deep dive into effective Product Portfolio Management and its crucial role in modern integrated value planning. Step by step, I’ll unveil the "rules of the game", providing you with actionable tactics to overcome common pitfalls.

As part of Integrated Value Planning

First, I’ll situate Product Portfolio Management as a critical component of our new vision on S&OP called Integrated Value Planning, or S&OP 2.0.


This vision involves a holistic review of the product and customer portfolios to ensure alignment with strategic objectives, which you can review in detail in our previous blog. I’ll give a short summary on how to achieve Integrated Value Planning here:

  1. Create Awareness by developing cross-departmental communication about the complexities and costs associated with the current portfolio.
  2. Integrate Financial and Supply Chain Planning to become the centre of your S&OP and collaborate on long-term planning data with every Supply Chain stakeholder involved.
  3. Start Collaborative Forecasting Process in which you have visibility on the inventory levels, historical consumption and sales plan of your A-customers, and reserve certain capacities with key suppliers.
  4. Define Guidelines by establishing minimum volume thresholds and margin requirements that align with long-term strategic goals.
  5. Organize Regular Reviews by implementing quarterly executive portfolio meetings and monthly follow-ups to ensure continuous improvement and alignment.

In this new vision, balancing the Supply Chain Triangle is still key, as our CEO Bram Desmet has been addressing since his first book in 2018. The way effective portfolio management connects with it, is by ensuring that the product and customer mix aligns with the strategic goals of your company’s integrated value planning. This approach allows your business to make informed decisions based on comprehensive profitability and performance data.

Hurdles towards effective Product Portfolio Management

Achieving effective Product Portfolio Management is challenging due to various obstacles, including the complexity of accurately allocating costs and understanding profitability drivers. When I take a closer look at my own customers, several issues pop up regularly:

  1. Product portfolio analysis is often a one-off exercise, and only occurs when the profitability of a business has eroded significantly. If it does take place, most of the effort (up to 80%) goes to gathering all the necessary data.
  2. Most companies are unable to integrate Product Portfolio Management into their regular planning meetings, even though it should be a recurring process.
  3. When a portfolio analysis does take place, people don’t know where to start in the vast sea of data across products and customers. They miss the operational data to add complexity drivers, and they lack the capability to run an aggregated analysis on multiple levels in the BOM.
  4. This one-off way of working also prevents KPI tracking across product decisions and calculated impact, and blocks transforming Portfolio Management from a project into a process.
  5. And when companies do decide on specific portfolio actions, only a small percentage (around 20%) is actually implemented.

This is unfortunate, because proactive Portfolio Management can deliver up to 2% of a company’s EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization)!

How to improve and build a winning portfolio?

For our vision on winning portfolios, I like to link back to the Supply Chain Triangle created by Bram Desmet. Winning portfolios try to optimize the balance between the three corners of that Supply Chain Triangle:

  1. We want to ensure that our company achieves the targeted sales or growth ambitions,
  2. We want to achieve our margin ambitions by managing profitability and cost to optimize margins in line with expectations,
  3. And we also want to free up cash to create a positive cash-flow where our working capital is being utilized in the most efficient way in our portfolio.

 

So, the golden standard regarding portfolios in this context is to achieve a positive evolution on individual products in sales, margin and working capital. Every new product or product range we introduce, we should launch with this ambition. Unfortunately, organizations tend to struggle to reveal which parts of their broader portfolio are contributing to a winning position, which actions they need to take to manage their portfolio, and how they should follow up on those actions and their resulting impact.

And because this balancing act involves every corner of a company, Portfolio Management should always be positioned as a central, cross-departmental function within the organization. It requires collaboration among sales, marketing, operations, and finance to align on strategic goals and ensure consistent implementation of portfolio guidelines.

Actions you can take along the Portfolio Ladder

So how do you achieve a winning portfolio? It all starts with having a clear picture of your active portfolio. Which products are bringing in big profits, and which are adding very little to the profitability of your business?

One way to look at your portfolio is through the overview below. As you see here, the portfolio is structured as a ladder, climbing from the Phase Out zone all the way to the Golden Core. The idea of this visualization is that you should always try to increase the number of our customers and products that are in the winning segment, the triple U segment or golden core, where sales is up, margins are up, and your working capital and fixed asset efficiency (i.e. capital employed efficiency) are up.

The goal of effective Portfolio Management is to move products up. When you can’t stop products from falling, that’s your cue to consider strategies to phase them out, preferably before they drop down to the triple D segment or Phase Out zone. This can be achieved through multiple portfolio actions, such as price increases, drops in costs, efficiency gains, driving volume growth, etc. A phase-out should only be resorted to as a last option.

Understanding relative profitability and cost of complexity

Understanding relative profitability across the product and customer portfolio is key to compare different products and figure out which of these portfolio actions you should take. Therefore, the quality of the profitability reporting and measures is quite important.

The role of profitability in Portfolio Management is to understand the relative profitability across the product and customer portfolio. To interpret margins correctly you first need to understand how costs are grouped, how the P&L (profit and loss) statement is structured and how costs are allocated to either the product or customer dimension.

To successfully implement portfolio actions, it is then key to have a pragmatic cost allocation approach for different cost components which allow to create a Product Complexity Margin and Customer Margin as addition to the net sales margin based upon standard product cost. This is a topic we discuss in more detail in our whitepaper on Building Winning Portfolios.

Defining the rules of the game

Defining clear rules upfront is essential for effective Portfolio Management. These rules include minimum volume and margin thresholds, evaluation periods for new products, and guidelines for collaboration across departments. Agreement on these rules ensures consistency and facilitates smoother implementation:

  1. Creating Awareness: Raise cross-departmental awareness about the costs of complexity and link this to the strategic plan. Understanding the current state of cost allocation and complexity is crucial.
  2. Defining Portfolio Guidelines: Establish minimum volume thresholds and margin requirements. Agree on the evaluation period for new products with all stakeholders and ensure executive support.
  3. Reviewing and Addressing Violations: Regularly review the portfolio to identify and address deviations from established guidelines. This should happen on different time horizons—annually, quarterly, and monthly—to ensure continuous alignment and improvement.

How to transition to a Portfolio Management process

The best way, in my opinion, to build a successful recurring Portfolio Management process and keep the executive engagement high, is to integrate executive portfolio reviews once every quarter. The goal of the executive portfolio review is to monitor the realization of the portfolio actions and decisions, to analyse the portfolio evolution of the last quarter, and to decide on portfolio actions for the next quarter.

It is up to the process owner of Portfolio Management to prepare the executive portfolio reviews, as well as track and drive progress on the portfolio actions. Every month the process owner should align with the different sales, operations, supply chain & finance stakeholders to ensure progress is made.

And thirdly, the executive team should define a portfolio plan yearly in which clear targets are set for the upcoming budget year, in line with the strategic direction and goals of the company and the role the different product categories have in realizing those ambitions.

The combination of the monthly follow-up, quarterly executive review process and annual target setting creates a stable, recurring and sustained portfolio management process that will form a strong basis for your winning portfolio.

The Solventure Portfolio Management Platform: Solventure Perform

In today's complex business environment, robust tools and data are indispensable. And the same is true for Portfolio Management tooling. To streamline your portfolio management, we offer a Product Portfolio Management Platform: Solventure Perform that:

  • Creates awareness on the health of your product & customer portfolio throughout the entirety of your company;
  • Supports portfolio decisions by relying on real-time data-driven insights (directly linked with your ERP) and our own recommendations;
  • And tracks the performance of your portfolio to see how it evolves through time, making sure it stays healthy through enforced guidelines, and alter the course when needed.

In the end, Solventure Perform will grow winning portfolios that help improve your corporate performance, allow company growth and strengthen the efficiency of your organization.

Key Take-Aways 

To build an effective Product Portfolio Management strategy, businesses should:

  1. Link Strategy to Portfolio: Ensure all portfolio decisions are aligned with strategic goals for sales, margin, and working capital.
  2. Agree on Guidelines: Establish and agree on portfolio guidelines with all stakeholders to ensure consistency and alignment.
  3. Think Process Over Project: Adopt a process-oriented approach rather than a project-based one to create sustainable and recurring Portfolio Management practices.
  4. Utilize Supportive Tools: Implement tools that support collaboration and data-driven decision-making to manage the portfolio efficiently.

By following these guidelines and leveraging advanced tools like Solventure Perform, businesses can achieve a well-managed portfolio that drives profitability, efficiency, and strategic alignment. For further insights, businesses are encouraged to explore the detailed whitepaper on ¨Product Portfolio Management.

Discover now the full webinar: 

Portfolio Power Play: Cut Costs, Maximize Gains

 

Discover the following:

  • The role of Product Portfolio Management in S&OP 2.0 or Integrated Value Planning as we call it.
  • Strategies for aligning profit calculations with real-world scenarios

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