**blows dust off this blog**
Hello again! It's been a quiet year here at PSB Delegation! Well, quiet on the website, we've been busy elsewhere this past year!
In reading a blog of someone I admire, I'm reminded of a tradition of "Ending as you mean to go on"... So I'm ending 2013, with a post to let you know, we're still here. We still love to fix and help, and teach and mentor all things procurement, supply chain, contract-related. We just didn't work on the blog/website/twitter/facebook side of things in 2013. I'm looking forward to reconnecting in whatever form makes sense in 2014...
So, enjoy yourselves this New Year's Eve, enjoy the New Year and we'll catch up later ;)
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Sunday, April 7, 2013
How Do You Contract Based on Vague Answers?
Recently a vendor asked for a copy of a winning proposal. I've learned this is normal for US vendors to do, but in Canada, not so much. In our discussion they came to realize there are two main reasons for this: Canadian protection of privacy legislation, and the RFP is a contract!
1) FOIPPA/PIPA/PIPEDA - these are the overriding privacy law in various parts of Canada - FOIPPA in the province of BC being the one I'm most familiar with. To release an RFP would require a Freedom of Information request; a timeframe for a response; and a great deal of time and effort on the part of an FOI officer to redact the information.
The flipside of this legislation is the proponent doesn't get to mark 'everything' as confidential and a proponent doesn't necessarily get notified if an FOI request has been made. Although many organizations do the courtesy of giving them a heads up, by law the information is to be released and the proponent cannot stop it. The information would have to be proven to be proprietary and marked as such before submission....and no, marking the proposal as 'confidential & not to be released without permission' does NOT override the law.
2) RFP Contract - in the US, the RFP is an advertisement; in Canada, the RFP is an offer. In responding to the RFP, proponents accept the terms/conditions of the RFP and form a contract with the buying organization. This means the buying organization has to play by the rules as set out in its document. That means the buying organization must score/evaluate the proposal against the weightings & criteria contained in the RFP. What some US vendors don't realize is their proposal is the 'final offer'; what is contained in their written proposal forms their evaluation score. There's no new information submitted 'later'.
In our vendor debriefing discussion, the US-based vendor admitted they keep their proposals 'vague' because of the number of times their proposals are released to their competition (in the US). As a result they scored much lower. It causes me to wonder: How does a buying organization make a procurement decision on a vague proposal? How does one evaluate if the response to the written criteria has no details?
1) FOIPPA/PIPA/PIPEDA - these are the overriding privacy law in various parts of Canada - FOIPPA in the province of BC being the one I'm most familiar with. To release an RFP would require a Freedom of Information request; a timeframe for a response; and a great deal of time and effort on the part of an FOI officer to redact the information.
The flipside of this legislation is the proponent doesn't get to mark 'everything' as confidential and a proponent doesn't necessarily get notified if an FOI request has been made. Although many organizations do the courtesy of giving them a heads up, by law the information is to be released and the proponent cannot stop it. The information would have to be proven to be proprietary and marked as such before submission....and no, marking the proposal as 'confidential & not to be released without permission' does NOT override the law.
2) RFP Contract - in the US, the RFP is an advertisement; in Canada, the RFP is an offer. In responding to the RFP, proponents accept the terms/conditions of the RFP and form a contract with the buying organization. This means the buying organization has to play by the rules as set out in its document. That means the buying organization must score/evaluate the proposal against the weightings & criteria contained in the RFP. What some US vendors don't realize is their proposal is the 'final offer'; what is contained in their written proposal forms their evaluation score. There's no new information submitted 'later'.
In our vendor debriefing discussion, the US-based vendor admitted they keep their proposals 'vague' because of the number of times their proposals are released to their competition (in the US). As a result they scored much lower. It causes me to wonder: How does a buying organization make a procurement decision on a vague proposal? How does one evaluate if the response to the written criteria has no details?
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Associate Guest Post by Rusty Joerin of Woodsgift Enterprises
Buying from local goods and services suppliers has many advantages, politically and economically. Senior Government legislation has mandated that public sector organizations must publically tender most procurement and not exclude suppliers from across Canada based on geographic location. We (too) often hear examples of tender awards to “out of town” vendors offering goods and services a little bit cheaper than the “local” supplier where all other factors are equal.
Or were all other factors considered? Let’s explore this sensitive issue.
Sr. Government Legislation – Agreement on Internal Trade (AIT) and New West Partnership Agreement (NWPA) are intended to reduce interprovincial trade barriers and enhance competiveness. Legislative goals are articulated and can be read here: http://www.newwestpartnershiptrade.ca/pdf/NewWestPartnershipTradeAgreement.pdf
School Districts, Post-Secondary Institutions and Municipalities have deep roots in their local economies and social networks. It’s a tough call to award business to “away” supplier when “local” supplier is equally competent but a bit more expensive.
Competition, however, is a good thing. If local supplier is complacent, away supplier will take their business. Local supplier can also expand its market by bidding goods and services in away supplier’s trading area.
The request to supply document will determine the process for selecting which supplier your organization will contract with. The tendering organization can state legitimate criteria (to the goods or services requested) additional to price for consideration when evaluating responses to their supply requests. The relative weighting of each criterion must be disclosed and the evaluation process should be quantifiable and defensible. Public sector buyers are often required to demonstrate that they are obtaining the best value from their selected suppliers to both taxpayers and losing bidders.
The development of a 100 km supply chain will require careful procurement planning, knowledge of the local marketplace and may be assisted through the provision of supplier development workshops. While not everything can be locally sourced, local suppliers of many goods and services can be every bit as competitive as the away suppliers when all legitimate factors are considered in the supplier selection process.
Rusty James Joerin, SCMP is a Supply Chain Management Professional and accredited by the Purchasing Management Association of Canada. He offers procurement services primarily to public sector organizations that do not have a professional supply manager on staff and provides additional capacity to assist with project related supply.
Information about his experience and qualifications may be found at:www.woodsgift.com
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