By M.V. Greene
For the Billion Dollar
Roundtable Inc., or BDR, at age 20 — the journey continues.
The corporate-based
advocacy organization is marking the 20th anniversary of its founding this
year, still advancing a vision to lead, influence and shape supplier-diversity
excellence globally.
Since 2001, BDR has
recognized and celebrated U.S. companies with a demonstrated commitment of an
annual supply-chain diversity spend of $1 billion or more, while collaborating
and targeting best practices that move the function forward.
Sharon Patterson, who
co-founded the organization with Shirley Harrison and Don McKneely, said BDR
remains as relevant now as it was at the founding. “The vision for the future
of supplier diversity is full of hope,” Patterson said. “It involves the
awarding of continued growth opportunities, training and development to all
types of diverse suppliers in corporate supply chains at every level.”
How did the BDR take
root?
Patterson and Harrison
were working with a corporate group when the company’s composite procurement
spend with minority- and women-owned businesses reached $1 billion in 2001.
They and the C-suite were thrilled at the achievement and wanted to celebrate
the milestone and keep that spend momentum going, Patterson recalled.
“They also wondered what
other corporations had achieved the same milestone and what could be learned by
a confluence of ideas from this accomplishment,” she said.
Enter MBN USA publisher
Don McKneely, president and CEO of TexCorp Communications Inc., and
conversations began among the co-founders. He had created a model in his
publications for a “Million Dollar Roundtable”, a group of supply-chain
procurement individuals who spent more than $1 million annually with minority
suppliers that served as an inspiration for what was to come, Patterson said.
The co-founders brainstormed
ideas, surveyed other corporations and then put forth an ambitious plan to
launch an organization where the diversity spend threshold would be $1 billion,
thus the creation of Billion Dollar Roundtable Inc.
“Twenty years ago, we
were making good progress and seeing positive success in supplier diversity.
The whole idea was to build on that success and take supplier diversity to the
next level. The creation of the Billion Dollar Roundtable gave companies a new
focus and new targets they could shoot for. We found that very positive and
very progressive companies wanted to be a part of this movement,” McKneely
said.
Ten charter member
companies joined the not-for-profit effort in 2001, including current members
AT&T, IBM, Walmart, Verizon Communications, General Motors, Ford and
Daimler Chrysler — now Stellantis.
Fast forward 20 years,
and BDR is sticking to its founding principles — promoting thought leadership
on key topics in supplier diversity, conducting annual best practices summits,
launching new initiatives and programs, and collaborating with like-minded
organizations. BDR recently marked its anniversary at its annual summit, titled
“Celebrating Two Decades of Resiliency & Transformation”, which was
conducted for the first time as a virtual event because of the pandemic.
Today, 28 corporations —
including the seven charter members — make up BDR’s roster of member companies.
In addition to the charter members, other BDR member companies are Adient
Apple, Avis Budget Group, Bank of America, Boeing, CDW, Comcast/NBCUniversal,
Cummins, CVS Health, Dell, Exelon, Honda North America, Johnson & Johnson,
JPMorgan Chase, Kaiser Permanente, Kroger, Merck, Microsoft, Pacific Gas and
Electric, Procter & Gamble and Toyota Motor North America.
A 2020 BDR report showed
that documented composite supply-chain diversity spend of its member companies
had reached $115 billion.
BDR Chairman Shelley
Stewart Jr., retired vice president and chief procurement officer at E. I. du
Pont de Nemours & Co., noted that BDR is an organization that relies on
collaboration among its corporate members — even among market competitors — to
advance solutions that will benefit the whole universe of the practice of
supplier diversity.
In 2020, for instance,
BDR launched its BDR Connects webinar series, a recurring program that brings
in subject matter experts to tackle specific topics in supplier diversity, such
as trends affecting supplier diversity in the automotive and food industries,
impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on business strategies and impact of global
business environments.
In another initiative,
BDR is updating its book, “Supplier Diversity Best Practices: Building
Excellence to Improve the Supply-Chain Matrix,” to refresh and examine
additional best-practice areas for operating viable and successful
supplier-diversity programs to achieve billion-dollar spend.
Regarding policy
positions, in 2018 BDR added certifications from disability- and veteran-owned
enterprises — along with lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender- or LGBT-owned
enterprises — to minority- and women-owned businesses, as a means for expanding
the reach of opportunities for diverse companies.
Stewart said that often
corporations will need to undergo organizational culture changes to reach the
billion-dollar spend breakthrough, requiring the involvement of leadership at
all levels of the organization. As a condition of membership, BDR member
companies are audited annually to ensure they continue to meet the spend
threshold.
“Yes, it is difficult to
get to $1 billion and to sustain it. Corporations must think hard and long
about their commitments to diverse suppliers to drive the change needed to
deliver a $1 billion-plus [spend],” he said.
Stewart added that BDR
works with corporations seeking to achieve BDR membership through its
Ambassador program, in which a current member company is assigned to a
prospective member to review requirements.
Patterson said BDR looks
forward to pushing ahead with innovative achievements that will continue to
propel the organization.
“Supplier diversity is
receiving outstanding attention worldwide. It’s an exciting time. Investment
entities interested in investing in diverse businesses are making funds available
in record numbers. This is the time to invest in diverse suppliers to help them
build capacity and elevate capability,” she said.
To learn more about BDR,
visit billiondollarroundtable.org.
BDR past chairmen 2001-2021 in order of succession
• Don McKneely
• Jethro Joseph
• Bill Moon
• Rick Hughes
• Shelley Stewart