Loading...

Course Description

Discover and master the fundamentals of purchasing by understanding your strategic and tactical roles as a purchasing practitioner. Improve your company's bottom-line profitability by learning and implementing key concepts such as negotiation, supplier sourcing and qualification, outsourcing and make-or-buy analysis. Learn the basics of supplier partnerships, capital budgeting and green buying.

In this online course, you will learn how to define internal customer needs, generate purchase requisitions and purchase orders, expedite, trace and receive supplier deliveries, maintain effective purchasing records and create and manage various purchasing budgets. You'll learn about business law, contracts, leasing, Six Sigma and total quality management (TQM). You will also learn how to recruit, select and evaluate purchasing personnel, and learn the importance of business ethics.

Course Outline

Lesson 01 - Contributions of Purchasing
  • In this first lesson, you'll learn about the various types of professional purchasing certification, including those offered by the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) and the National Institute of Government Purchasing (NIGP). You'll explore the breadth of the purchasing body of knowledge and identify several areas where purchasing provides value to organizations. You'll also discover the significance of buying on a total cost basis and learn how savings you generate for purchased materials and services improve your company's bottom-line profitability.
Lesson 02 - Organizational Strategy and Purchasing Response
  • In this lesson, you'll learn how to set a vision and mission statement, and how to develop objectives and strategies. The lesson will also discuss the mechanics of creating purchase requisitions and purchase orders and how to use them effectively. You'll finish up by exploring different conditions that benefit from negotiation and the steps and techniques that contribute to a successful outcome.
Lesson 03 - Elements of the Purchasing Cycle
  • All organizations use a purchasing cycle to manage buying activities. To help you effectively manage purchasing activities, this lesson presents a seven step-cycle that begins with need recognition and ends with receipt of delivery. You'll explore the first five steps in depth and see how specifications, branding, and samples are three common methods for defining user needs. You'll also learn about four different forms of competition (monopoly, oligopoly, full competition, and perfect competition) and see how competition affects prices.
Lesson 04 - The Purchasing Cycle (Conclusion); Make or Buy Analysis; Leasing
  • In this lesson, you'll conclude your exploration of the purchasing cycle by learning about steps six and seven (perform follow-up and receive the delivery). Then, you'll examine expediting, follow-up, and tracing as methods to enhance on-time deliveries. You'll also learn how purchasing supports the receiving function and discover the underlying concepts of make or buy and leasing.
Lesson 05 - Supplier Sourcing
  • As a purchasing professional, you depend on your suppliers. After all, without capable suppliers, it would be very difficult (if not impossible) to meet your organization's needs. For that reason, this lesson will discuss the importance of proper source selection and how to prepare a prospective supplier list. You'll find out how to evaluate each supplier-sourcing element and determine when to conduct a supplier visit.
Lesson 06 - Green Buying; Purchasing Records; Competitive Bidding
  • Green buying is an extremely important organizational concept. Firms that use it successfully can achieve internal objectives and also satisfy societal goals. This lesson will discuss the purpose of green buying and review its 3Rs (reduce, reuse, and recycle). To help you locate historical information when you need it, you'll investigate the various types of purchasing records and learn about electronic record keeping and reporting. You'll also learn all about competitive bidding and understand how to use a request for quotation (RFQ) or a request for proposal (RFP).
Lesson 07 - Business Law, Contracts, and Legal Forms of the Organization
  • This lesson will discuss important legal matters that purchasing professionals encounter daily. You'll begin by looking at business law and then move on to contracts. You'll learn about the principal-agency relationship and the four major forms of organization (sole proprietorships, general partnerships, limited partnerships, and corporations).
Lesson 08 - Six Sigma and Total Quality Management; ERP/MRP II
  • Suppliers rely on manufacturing and quality systems. Purchasing professionals need to know about these systems because their use (successful or unsuccessful) highly influences suppliers' abilities to fill your purchase orders on-time, with quality, and at a desirable price. In this lesson, you'll look at Six Sigma and Total Quality Management (TQM), and identify how these philosophies and methodologies benefit organizations. You'll learn about the elements of a supply chain, Manufacturing Resource Planning (MRP II), and Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP).
Lesson 09 - Introduction to Budgeting
  • Purchasing, as a major organizational function, is involved with a number of different types of budgets. These budgets include the purchasing department administration budget (also known as an expense budget), the production materials budget, and the maintenance, repair, and operating (MRO) budget. To use budgets wisely, you need to know how they work, what they are supposed to accomplish, and how they are constructed. In this lesson, you'll discover the primary purposes, advantages, and disadvantages of budgets. The lesson will cover how to select a budget period, review variable budgets, and understand budget variances.
Lesson 10 - Capital Budgeting
  • For many organizations, capital expenditures represent the largest disbursement of funds. Purchasing practitioners play a number of roles in capital budgeting, including assisting with requests for capital expenditures, serving on capital budget evaluation committees, and leading teams to acquire capital assets. This lesson will help you effectively participate in those activities. You'll learn the definition of capital budgeting, understand the initiation process for capital request proposals, and examine different justification methods for project proposals.
Lesson 11 - Supplier Partnerships; Ethics and Organizational Politics
  • A supplier partnership is a fairly recent type of arrangement. It characterizes a progressive way for sellers and buyers to work together. Supplier partnerships require an extensive amount of preparation and commitment, but the payoff is substantial for firms that succeed. This lesson will discuss the prerequisites and elements of a supplier partnership. You'll also explore ethics and organizational politics and study their effects on purchasing practitioners.
Lesson 12 - Recruiting, Training, and Evaluating Purchasing Personnel
  • In the final lesson, you'll discover how to recruit, select, and evaluate purchasing personnel. Then, you'll learn how to implement a performance planning process, including administering performance reviews. Finally, you'll find out why so many people dislike giving performance reviews and get tips on how to make your reviews more meaningful.

Learner Outcomes

  • Identify the significance of buying on a total cost basis and understand how savings you generate for purchased materials and services improve your company's bottom-line profitability
  • Create purchase requisitions and purchase orders and use them effectively
  • Explain how competition affects prices
  • Evaluate each supplier-sourcing element and determine when to conduct a supplier visit

Notes

This is an asynchronous online course offered through the third party vendor ed2go. This course can be taken on either a PC, Mac, or Chromebook. The instructional materials required for this course are included in enrollment and will be available online. There are twelve lessons in the course, and two lessons are released each week on Wednesdays and Fridays. You do not have to be present when lessons are released. You will have access to all lessons until the course ends. However, the interactive discussion area that accompanies each lesson will automatically close two weeks after the lesson is released. As such, we strongly recommend that you complete each lesson within two weeks of its release. The final exam will be released on the same day as the last lesson. Once the final exam has been released, you will have two weeks to complete all of your course work, including the final exam.
Loading...
Please call our Customer Service Center at 704.330.4223 or email at ContinuingEd@cpcc.edu for information on the next available section.
Required fields are indicated by .