The
supplier vetting and onboarding process at JPMorganChase (JPMC) is a rigorous
one designed to hone potential supplier capabilities and create suppliers who
excel.
“Our
process is thorough, and we leave no stone unturned,” said Ted Archer, managing
director and global head of business partner diversity at JPMorganChase. “As a
result, we’re left with a diamond of a business partner who is set up for
success.”
One of the
diverse suppliers that has benefited from that process is Pinnacle Group, the
largest Hispanic-owned contingent workforce solutions provider in North
America.
Pinnacle
became an IT and professional staffing supplier for JPMC in 2021 after an
extensive request for proposal process. The company achieved No. 1 supplier
status in its third full quarter of service to JPMC and has maintained that
status in six of the nine quarters since then. More than 100 Pinnacle
contractors have transitioned to full-time JPMC employment.
“JPMC was
intentional throughout the process of searching for, selecting and engaging new
diverse providers who were capable of serving a client of this scale and
sophistication,” said Nina Vaca, CEO of Pinnacle Group. “Our success in the
program is not only a testament to JPMC’s commitment to extending a contract
and an opportunity to diverse suppliers to allow them to participate, but it’s
also evidence of something much deeper — their commitment to create the
conditions in which diverse suppliers can thrive.”
Archer said
Pinnacle is a JPMC success story.
“Success
for us is measured in the form of quantitative things such as increasing
diverse spend,” he said. “It’s also measured in how our partners are scaling
and growing over time. Pinnacle is a good example of how we measure both of
those things. To see a firm leverage the relationship, really deliver against
expectation in our supply chain and then grow over time is exciting.”
Focus on
supplier development
Supplier
development is a key component of JPMC’s overall strategy for driving value
within the supply chain. The financial institution dedicates sourcing and
business development professionals to work with suppliers to help them
understand the procurement life cycle and to enhance their capabilities and
business acumen.
Vaca said
JPMC’s top-level commitment to increasing diverse spend while also helping its
suppliers succeed has been clear throughout the JPMC and Pinnacle relationship.
Strategies that Pinnacle found helpful included a focus on making sure
capabilities and scale aligned with JPMC’s needs, active mentorship and
coaching, proactive outreach to Pinnacle’s leadership team to share information
and ensure alignment, targeted opportunities aligned with the company’s
capabilities and transparency about Pinnacle’s performance.
“When a new
supplier joins a program of long-tenured incumbent suppliers, the gaps in
knowledge and relationships can be extremely challenging,” she said. “JPMC team
members provided insight, guidance and time to mentor Pinnacle to succeed in
their environment. And they have continued to nurture the relationship with
quarterly check-ins and business reviews along the way.”
Archer said
quarterly check-ins and reviews are key to JPMC’s supplier development efforts.
These include not only typical check-ins on performance but also a chance for
suppliers to talk with JPMC about challenges and growth plans.
“Whenever
we can identify places where there are resources that can help address
concerns, then we make it happen,” he said. “We identify places where we can
close a gap. That could be technical things that are outside of the bounds of
the specific project. It could be related to capital or addressing the need for
access to bonding or insurance. Those are things that don’t always come up in a
performance conversation, but those are things we try to understand so we can
have a dialogue that leads to a relationship that grows over time.”
JPMC’s
investment in supplier development has been key to Pinnacle’s success, Vaca
said.
“By holding
all suppliers in the program accountable to the same metrics and being clear
about performance expectations, they allow capable diverse firms like Pinnacle
to thrive,” she said. “Receiving valuable feedback from a client who is
invested in your company’s success is a game-changer. For Pinnacle, this has
been a living example of how firms get this right and how companies can truly
achieve better business outcomes and increase diverse spend at the same time.”
Preparing
for the opportunity
Becoming a
supplier for a large firm such as JPMC often takes years of preparation.
“There are
a number of factors to be ready as a firm to take on a large corporate project
or corporate supplier relationship,” Archer said. “It can take quite a bit of
cultivation over time because those opportunities aren’t always available when
you are. Being ready for the opportunity is important.”
While
Pinnacle became a JPMC supplier in 2021, the company’s cultivation of the
relationship with the financial services firm began several years earlier when
Vaca met JPMC’s head of supplier diversity and community engagement at an
annual U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce meeting.
“The
conversation went well and there seemed to be some good synergy, but at that
moment there wasn’t a specific opportunity to work with JPMorganChase at that
time,” Archer said. “Nina was persistent and thoughtful and nurtured that
relationship over time. That led to her being ready when the opportunity
presented itself.”
Vaca
agrees. “Opportunities to work with companies like JPMC in a meaningful way
don’t come along every day,” she said. “You have to prepare your organization,
invest significantly in your internal scalability, advocate to make them happen
and then consistently overdeliver once you’re there.”
Vaca’s
advice to other companies who want to do business with firms such as JPMC
includes investing in a capable service team, ensuring financial stability and
implementing strong IT security practices.
“Once
suppliers secure a contract with a large company, it’s also important that they
are adaptable to respond to changing demands as well as ready to take on new
opportunities that arise either with the company itself or with other firms
within the supply chain,” Archer said.
To learn
more about JPMChase’s supplier diversity program, visit
jpmorganchase.com/about/suppliers/supplier-diversity.
To learn
more about Pinnacle Group, visit pinnacle1.com.