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Marketing procurement needs to get its skills future-fit to add maximum value to the business. Laura Forcetti, Director Marketing Services Asia Pacific and Global Sourcing at WFA, reveals the latest research.
Many marketing procurement organisations are navigating significant changes, yet there is strong confidence within the WFA community that the function is here to stay.
The journey post-Project Spring continues, aiming to establish marketing procurement as a profession rather than merely a function. This evolution is not about abandoning past successes, but about enhancing core marketing procurement activities without losing sight of the overall business goal.
Skills in Marketing Procurement is the latest report from the WFA’s Global Sourcing Board, which aims to support WFA members make a pivot within their organisation in advancing the marketing procurement practice while holding on to the fundamentals such as savings and the process work that they do.
Previous Sourcing Board publications have introduced a voluntary maturity curve, distinguishing between early stages focused on savings and project pipelines and more advanced stages involving co-created objectives, such as sustainability. The Board’s work provides voluntary guidance on transitioning from one maturity phase to the next, with each phase serving as a foundation for the following one. For instance, in relation to this maturity curve, earlier this year the Board explored how targets in marketing procurement are being set and delivered and how KPIs might vary depending on the team’s maturity level.
The data of this latest research is based on a survey conducted in August and September 2024, resulting in responses from 54 of the world’s largest companies. Respondents were all in marketing procurement leadership roles, with 72% of them having a global remit.
Key findings include:
This is especially true when it comes to new tech and investment areas such as influencers/e-comm, but also due to lack of resources in general. Even among teams currently considering themselves as leading on the maturity curve, 33% still express doubts about their future readiness.
Skills that teams currently excel in and use to stand out, such as ‘negotiation’, ‘contract management’ and ‘project management’, may lose relevance over the next two to five years. The tactical expertise that defines some procurement teams today could risk becoming obsolete tomorrow, creating urgency around upskilling and reskilling to retain differentiation and business relevance.
While only 24% of teams actively use AI, two-thirds express a strong interest in exploring its potential. Though the primary challenge for stretched teams might be finding the bandwidth to evaluate and implement AI opportunities effectively.
As teams evolve and globalise, local team sizes may face reductions. The survey found that while a third of respondents expect global teams to expand, one in four anticipate reductions in local teams. This shift could further impact the resources available to marketing procurement teams for leading certain activities and ensuring relevance within local markets.
A shortage of qualified candidates remains a critical issue. Despite this, many companies are not investing in internal skill development. Only 28% of respondents find internal development programmes always or mostly relevant, possibly due to their design by individuals with limited marketing procurement knowledge.
In the wake of this research, the goals of the Sourcing Board are to help WFA members identify the unique activities led by procurement that drive business growth or revenues and develop future skills identified in the survey, including strategic thinking, storytelling and creativity.
The Board also hopes to address current frustrations with internal training. Initiatives could include sharing positive stories, exploring how leading teams are training to maintain their advantage, but also looking at successful use cases of AI to rid the sector of tactical tasks and recentre the team on more added-value activities.
Finally, the Board will explore how to grow the pool of candidates, attract more skilled talent and promoting marketing procurement as a career option.
Members of our Global Sourcing Board have shared their perspectives on the importance of this research, outlining its potential impact on the next steps and the broader marketing procurement community:
Christopher Kredo, SVP, Global Procurement A&M, PepsiCo, and co-chair of WFA’s Sourcing Board says “What is the unique role only procurement can fulfil? Procurement’s unique value lies in aligning marketing investments with strategic business objectives, bridging the gap between marketing and finance – without overstepping into anyone’s decision-making space”
Kredo continues “There’s inherent power for marketing procurement in acting as investment managers with the right team, mindset, and focus. To equip our CMOs, CPOs and CFOs with insights into where marketing is heading and reinstate the value of marketing procurement, we need to develop a specific skill set. Ultimately, our role with the Sourcing Board is to help bridge the theoretical gap for WFA members to achieve impactful results.”
And Jennifer McLachlan, VP, Brand Building Purchases, P&G, and co-chair of WFA’s Sourcing Board says that “The work of WFA’s Sourcing Board extends beyond traditional procurement efforts, focusing on next-generation capabilities and engagement that will elevate the role of our discipline and its impact for years to come. Relevant skills are the new currency for successful marketing procurement teams. This research explores the root causes preventing skill enhancement and we hope it will encourage WFA members to take a step back and rethink how they can upskill or reskill themselves.” –
Tracy Allery, Global Marketing Category Leader and recent speaker at the Marketing Procurement iQ Summit in New York says that “Since Project Spring was published, we’ve received a great deal of feedback from marketing procurement teams. They tell us they believe in its principles but need help to deliver on them. How can procurement make the shift from a sole focus on savings to becoming a true business partner? With this report, the Sourcing Board begins to answer that call. It lays out a path from a tactical, savings-driven approach to a leading, commercially focused resource for the business.
Allery goes onto say that this report will be a useful tool for procurement teams, in assessing both the maturity of the function and the skills needed for the future. “It’s time for all marketing procurement teams to move past the diminishing returns of annually pushing rates, hours, and the seniority of roles. Once a solid commercial foundation is in place, there’s so much more value we can add, particularly as we connect directly to business objectives.”
Liliya Rechitsky, Sr. Director of Procurement, Best Buy, also a delegate at the recent Marketing Procurement iQ Summit in New York adds that “Alongside the considerable number of people who feel the talent pipeline isn’t sufficient, this research highlights a major issue: if we’re not ready and lack a strong pipeline, focusing on anything else becomes challenging”
Rechitsky continues “Advancing through the maturity curve and moving from one stage to the next is nearly impossible without robust talent development. We need to consider how we develop programmes specifically for the marketing procurement function; not only to drive business results, but also to nurture talent aiming to grow strategically within our organisations. Otherwise, they’ll leave, taking valuable competitive advantage with them to other organisations.” –
Please note that this research is WFA member only content. If interested in WFA membership, please get in touch with the WFA membership team.