Last week I posted a link to the Ontario Broader Public Sector Procurement Directive/Accountability Act. With an implementation date of April 1, 2011, smaller, independent public organizations are finding themselves having to implement corporate-sized procurement rules ‘off the side of their desks’.
How do you approach implementing something this complex without a corporate procurement department? Break it down into smaller components:
1) Understand the rules – make sure you are aware of what you can/cannot do, what your dollar thresholds are. Single page “cheat sheets” are helpful reminders to staff as to what path to take when they determine a need for a good or service.
2) Explain your process – both internally and externally. It is easier to be transparent, when everyone understands what you are procuring, how you will be doing it, what will be evaluated, and when.
3) Disclose your evaluation criteria – one of the keys to the trade agreements is disclosing the high level criteria for evaluation, and the weightings. Some organizations go further to disclose it on ALL procurements to be clear to all potential vendors (and to eliminate the internal confusion of ‘when do I need to disclose this?”)
4) Ensure all potential vendors have the same information – another key trademark to transparency and fairness. Make sure that any information that an incumbent may have is available to other bidders in order to level the playing field. As well, disclosing whether there is/is not an incumbent gives the vendor community the ability to decide whether it is worth their time to respond.
5) Keep an audit trail – in the name of transparency, and to withstand an audit of the process – keep documenting every step of the process, maintain a complete file from specification building through to contract award. This includes drafts (leading to a decision), email communications, faxes, proposals, evaluation books, signed declarations, letters/notifications of award. It may seem bureaucratic, but it makes life much easier at the end of a process to have a complete file in one place. Maintaining notes during the evaluation also helps for debriefing unsuccessful vendors without having to go back and re-read their proposal and evaluation score sheets.
6) Posting time – The minimum solicitation posting time of 15days is read by the vendor community as “you already have made your choice & are just doing a process to meet policy requirements”. Consider how much time it took you to build your specifications/statement of work and process? If the good/service is highly complex and your project document was built over a number of months – better quality responses will take longer than 15 days.
7) Be consistent – Ensure your processes follow the same path each time. There’s nothing worse than changing the rules, and then changing the way you do things at every turn.
8) Form of agreement w RFP – posting a copy of your resulting contract with your solicitation will greatly reduce the negotiation time as it will form part of your process. Depending upon the wording of your solicitation document (most Canadian public sector templates are based upon the non-negotiated RFP), vendors, by responding with a proposal, have accepted the terms and conditions of your contract attached.
9) Contract management tools – policy changes will affect your existing suppliers as well as smaller companies that haven’t bid on large contracts in past. Providing a sample invoice, contract documentation checklist, and monitoring reports will assist both your internal contract management efforts and compliance on the part of your vendors/contractors.
10) Debriefing - consider this a means to educate and build a stronger vendor community. The more vendors understand your process & how you evaluate proposals, the better the proposals & competition. PLUS, ask for feedback from the vendors as to how well you communicated your requirements; what additional information would they have wanted/needed. Improving the procurement process for future in addition to improving vendor proposals is a win/win for everyone.
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