

Schwartz speaks passionately about viewing the products they develop from a customer point-of-view to make sure they make a tangible difference to the end users.

We have done some of the structural things, like consolidating our supply base to strategic suppliers that have strategies and visions lined up with Philips’ strategy and vision.”Īside from the relationship Philips develops with their strategic partners, any medtech company needs to put the relationship with patients and healthcare professionals at the heart of everything they do. It’s easy to talk about the concept, but it's very hard to do in practice. “Everybody thinks that every procurement leader says, ‘We are going to leverage the supplier ecosystem and bring the suppliers closer to our activity’. Schwartz champions using an early engagement culture with their key suppliers, as he believes it provides them with an opportunity to step up their impact by giving them a seat at the table. “We are also heavily involved in new product development – which I think is common with other procurement organisations – but we are doing it at an even more technical level, partnering with the R&D organisation and getting involved very early in that new product innovation cycle.” “It is a unique combination compared to most other procurement organisations that you would typically see,” he says. The traditional procurement responsibilities fall under his management, but there is also the engineering arm connected to procurement, which allows them to leverage their relationships with their strategic partners to deliver what he believes are superior results. The structure at Philips gives Schwartz more of an end-to-end overview of products as they are designed and delivered. He went on to serve eighteen years at Boston Scientific in product development and supplier engineering, which provided an opportunity to develop expertise across the whole E2E product development cycle. He says one of his ambitions was always to become a leader of technical people, so having a technical skillset along with the MBA gave him a broader view of the overall business. He began at 3M after graduating, before achieving a master’s degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota and an MBA at the University of Minnesota. That’s really inspiring and has motivated me throughout my career in medtech.” Schwartz’s journey to Philips has seen him transition across different areas of responsibility since completing a mechanical engineering degree at MIT. Our products help them and other people around the globe improve or save their lives. “I wouldn't go anywhere else or to any other sector because the beauty of what we do here is that we make products and solutions which have a direct connection to our family and friends. Scott Schwartz is Chief Procurement Officer and Head of Sustaining Engineering at Royal Philips and has seen the company evolve in his eight years with a greater focus on health technology. One company that has developed their model to embrace their strategic partners and give key executives a wider view of conception of products to their end delivery is Philips. It is something easy to say but considerably more difficult to align that strategy with tangible results. Companies all over the world are trying to leverage their supplier and procurement ecosystems to give them a competitive advantage in the current marketplace.
