1 / 43

Bob Moodie NJM European, Economic & Management Consultants Limited

Selling to the Public Sector – helping Leicestershire SMEs unlock their potential. Bob Moodie NJM European, Economic & Management Consultants Limited. What we will look at:. The Context & Opportunities Understanding Procurement Processes Finding tender opportunities

charlot
Download Presentation

Bob Moodie NJM European, Economic & Management Consultants Limited

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Selling to the Public Sector – helping Leicestershire SMEs unlock their potential Bob Moodie NJM European, Economic & Management Consultants Limited

  2. What we will look at: • The Context & Opportunities • Understanding Procurement Processes • Finding tender opportunities • Developing a strategic approach • Becoming ‘Bid Ready’

  3. Context: Policies • Coalition Government’s aspiration to award 25% of central contracts to SMEs • Leicestershire County Council’s Sustainable Commissioning & Procurement Strategy (2009-13) • % expenditure with SMEs • No. of local SMEs submitting Pre-Qualification Questionnaires to ESPO when expressing an interest in Council requirements • The Comprehensive Spending Review (2010) • SME Concordat • Equality of Access (SME & Third Sector) • EU Procurement Directives (OJEU) • UK Government strategy and statutory requirements • Local authority procedures, statutory requirements

  4. Context: Economics • Extensive public sector budget cuts and spending pressures • Price & Value for Money (VfM) • Most Economically Advantageous Tender (MEAT) rather than Lowest Price • Collaborative buying by authorities – purchasing consortia • Rationalisation & Framework Agreements, Contract Bundling; • Reduction of public sector in house management overhead and increase in outsourcing NB Suppliers’ ability to deliver efficiency savings and effectiveness

  5. Context: Economics • VfM is the optimum combination of cost, quality and fitness for purpose to meet the buyer’s requirements (it is not about the lowest price) • Local authorities are subject to the Best Value guidelines • Embraces the concept of the ‘price-quality’ relationship • Selection usually will be made on the most economically advantageous tender (MEAT)

  6. Context: Society & Environment • Corporate Social Responsibility • Sustainability & Equality • Innovation & non contractual outcomes (Added Value) • Local Government Act 2000 – Wellbeing Powers • Leicestershire County Council’s Sustainable Commissioning & Procurement Strategy (2009-13) performance measures: • No. of contracts with a Total Value exceeding £1m that include a Social Clause • No. of high risk contracts where environmental considerations are included in the contract award (weighting 15% or more)

  7. Context: Technology E-Procurement: Transition from paper based to electronic based systems and processes: • E-Portals • E-tendering • E-auctions • Iprocurement • Purchasing Cards (pCards) • Real time reporting • Payment and Servicing

  8. Opportunities: Public Sector 9 Local Authorities: • Leicestershire County Council • Leicester City Council • North West Leicestershire District Council • Charnwood Borough Council • Melton Borough Council • Blaby District Council • Harborough District Council • Oadby & Wigston Borough Council • Hinckley & Bosworth District Council • 3 Universities: Leicester, Loughborough, De Montfort • 7 FE colleges: Stephenson, Loughborough, Brooksby Melton, North Warwickshire & Hinckley, South Leicestershire, Leicester, Loughborough University School of Art & Design • Schools Other: • NHS (subject to major review • Housing Associations / RSLs • The Emergency Services

  9. Opportunities • UK Public procurement is estimated at over £175 billion per annum (13% of UK GDP). • Leicestershire County Council spends over £300 million each year on goods, works and services. Over the next three to four years, to 2012-13, the Council will need to make savings of around £70m - that’s 25% of its budget. • Leicester City Council estimated procurement budget for the Authority is £260 million p.a. (2007-2008). • NHS Leicestershire & Rutland Procurement Partnership influences spend of approximately £250 million on goods and services each year.

  10. Leicestershire County Council Procurement Expenditure (2008-09)

  11. Opportunities • Policies to encourage SME involvement and a more level playing field • Better transparency and simplified procurement processes • Equal treatment and fair competition • Open markets & better access to information NB: • Procedures can be complex, time consuming and open access creates more competition • Adopt a strategic approach • Willingness to be involve

  12. Opportunities: SMEs • Brings greater competition • Lower cost base • Innovation • Responsiveness • Flexibility • Quality of service • Specialists • Customer focus • Local Knowledge Bear this in mind when you are developing your USP for a particular contract!

  13. Public Procurement: Demystifying the Process

  14. Procurement Procedures: The formality of the procedures and process increases in line with the contract value and risk. Lower value contracts • Advertising not essential • Officer discretion • Approved supplier lists • Verbal and Written Quotes common or tender process • Easiest to compete and win – harder to find Higher value contracts • Advertised • Formal Tender process only • Essential above EU Thresholds • Framework agreements • Easiest to find – harder to win

  15. Procedures – Example Each organisation has its own published procurement policy, procedures, processes and contract value thresholds in place. For example.........

  16. Local Procedures

  17. Procedures Common Procurement Procedures: • OPEN - One Stage Process • Each applicant submits a full priced tender • RESTRICTED – Two Stage Process • i) Pre Qualification Questionnaire (PQQ) to select shortlist of potential suppliers • ii) Invitation to Tender (ITT) to shortlisted potential suppliers –full priced tender required

  18. Procedures • FRAMEWORK – Two Stages or More • Suppliers selected through an open / restricted procedure to a ‘panel’ of suppliers for given period • Call offs or mini competitions may be held when services / goods required Less common: • NEGOTIATED - Two Stages • Very complex, high value • Tender specification not clear – supplier input required • COMPETITIVE – Two Stages • Tender specification requires development – dialogue with supplier

  19. Procedures Pre Qualification Questionnaire (PQQ): • Evaluation of organisation • Are you safe and appropriate choice? • Compliance • Past performance / track record • Selection criteria Invitation to Tender Stage (ITT): • Evaluation of bids • Your service / product / works offer • Future performance • Award criteria

  20. Procurement Process Overview Procure Contract Notice EOI PQQ Tender Commission Manage Evaluate Review Award

  21. PQQ Information General Business Information • Business Details • Status (Sole contractor / consortium) • Ownership • Business Probity • Professional Conduct Documentation required may include: • Company History • HR Information • Administrative Information (Company Registration/VAT Number) • Quality Standards Accreditation / Certificates

  22. PQQ Information Financial & Insurance Information: • Turnover • Accounts • Insurance Documentation Required may include: • Audited accounts, Management accounts, Parent company accounts • Bankers statements & references • Financial projections, including cashflow forecasts • Details of previous contracts and values • Capital availability • Certification of Incorporation, Certificate of Name Change • Insurance Certificates

  23. PQQ Information Business Activities, Track Record, References • Business Activities • HR Information (FTEs / Training Records / CVs) • Referee Contact Details for recent contracts • Relevant Contract Performance • Subcontractors • Capability Statements • Case Studies • References (norm = 3 recent referees)

  24. PQQ Information Essential Policies: • Quality Management • Equality & Diversity • Health & Safety • Environment Management & Sustainability Others Policies: • Business Ethics • Corporate Social Responsibility • Business Continuity • Sub Contracting PQQ may require you to supply : specific responses, outline of strategy, copy of statements, copy of certifications etc

  25. PQQ Evaluation PQQ will be evaluated to select potential suppliers to invite to tender. Based on: • Business Probity • Technical Capability and Capacity • Financial Information • Contract Compliance • Policy Conformity NB: Evaluation includes: • Pass / Fail criteria • Financial risk based assessment • Criteria have different scores with weightings

  26. Example Scoring Framework

  27. ITT Information • If you are shortlisted from the PQQ or for the Open Tender procedure • Invitation to Tender documents will normally identify the information required and how to structure your response. • The areas covered are usually as follows: • What are you going to do • How are you going to do it • How much will it cost • Who is going to do it • What is your track record / prior experience • Compliance • References

  28. ITT Information Invitation to Tender (ITT) pack will include: • Instructions to Tenderers • The Specification • Form of Tender • Draft Contract Terms and Conditions • Declarations / Bona Fide • Pricing Schedule

  29. Costing the Proposal • Personnel & Tasks • Charging Rate(s) (Daily/Hourly) & Time • Fixed Cost / Variable Cost • Expenses & Disbursements • Contingency • VAT • Innovative Cost Proposals • Discounted Cost e.g. 5% early payment, economies of scale and efficiency savings linked to contract term and/or number of contracts (Lots) awarded • Buyer comfort: Offer 10% Contract Price Withheld until completion

  30. Adopt a Strategic Approach: Tactics • Before you start: is the tender opportunity right for your organisation? (To Bid or Not To Bid?) • Download / print off ALL PQQ / tender documents and read them carefully: • Is the specification relevant to your business activities? • Do you have a track record in the area? • What % of turnover does the contract represent – 20% rule? • What are the risks, who are your competitors and what is the % chance of success? • Is there an incumbent? • Can you answer each question with the information required? • Do you have the supporting documentation in place for compliance? • Can you make commercial sense of the contract price? • Do you have the in-house resources to deliver – do you need partners / subcontractors? • Do you have the time / resources to prepare the bid by the deadline?

  31. Adopt a Strategic Approach: Key Points • Address each element of the tender specification and structure your response accordingly • Do not cut and paste from previous bids • Be specific in your response – do not provide generic information • Understand what the buyer requires – show how your solution goes the ‘extra mile’ • Respond to the questions with relevant evidence and / or provide appropriate examples e.g. Case studies • Use diagrams, illustrations, graphics • Realistically price your offer and use any financial model provided • Review the drafts against the criteria, scores , weightings and revise • Proof read and check any figures / costings • Aim for clarity, brevity, readability and persuasion

  32. Adopt a Strategic Approach: Key Points • Review the evaluation criteria, scores and weighting (this should influence time / effort spent on each criterion response) • Beware of yes / no, pass / fail criteria • References – recent and relevant • Use tender envelope / label if provided • Ensure the submission is complete AND signed • Include copies of requested documentation e.g. Insurance certificates, accounts, policies etc • Respond by the correct format, date + time (electronic, electronic + post, post?)

  33. Tender Preparation: Key Steps • Appoint a bid manager / individual and team of key people • Meeting(s) with tender team for detailed review and interpretation of tender requirements & criteria (including scores & weightings). • Prepare work plan & allocation of roles/tasks/milestones with reference to tender & submission deadline. • NB: Build in time to review, refine and style bid • Determine whether you require clarification of any aspect of the tender and ask the question(s) allowing enough time for a response. Check regularly to see if any questions/answers have been submitted by competitors. • Conduct regular reviews of the draft tender • Conduct a mock assessment against the scoring matrix • Ensure you have enough time for signing and submission • Post submission ask for feedback

  34. Finding Opportunities • Where should you look / who should you know?

  35. Contract Notices

  36. Finding Opportunities: e-portals • Identify a number of key tender websites • Familiarise yourself with the website format and content • Register and or publish company details • Set up for Alerts service, newsletters etc • Appoint key individual(s) to monitor regularly for new contract opportunities • Apply filters to your search words (decide which opportunities to focus on)

  37. Buyer Requirements • Main evaluation criterion: ‘Most Economically Advantageous Tender • Understanding buyer’s needs • Combining price with quality and other relevant factors • Value for money • Acceptable level of risk • Efficiency • Improvement in performance or cost savings • Meeting department and organisation’s objectives • Reliability, consistency • Contract management • Inspection and audit

  38. Buyer Preferences

  39. Buyer Preferences

  40. Get Bid Ready: Preparing the Documents • Make note of instructions, word limits and submission format • Try to understand what each question is asking and why they are being asked. Be compliant! • Note the scoring / weighting of criteria and spend time / effort on your response accordingly • Make careful note of the deadline and make sure you submit well in advance of the deadline (avoid last minute submissions) • Anything you are not sure of, contact the buyer (but be aware that any question you ask will be notified to other suppliers) • Answer all questions honestly and be keen and positive in your responses (emphasise your USP). • Double check your response / second pair of eyes • Ensure you complete and submit all the documents required • If unsuccessful (or successful) ask for a debrief

  41. Get Bid Ready: Action Plan • Register AND publish on e-portals • Set up internal processes and identify individual(s) to monitor tender portals, sources, alerts • Identify and network with your local public sector buyer targets (at departmental / procurement level) • Attend meet the buyer events / tender briefings • Develop a Tender Resource Pack (e.g. Company & financial information, case studies, references etc) • Establish a working group for tender preparation • Search for potential partners / subcontractors • Strengthen your technical capacity, infrastructure, bid skills • Develop, improve your policies • Consider accreditation (e.g. CHAS, ISO, IiP etc) • Review unsuccessful bids • Act strategically – know when to bid and when not to bid!

  42. Be...

  43. Further one to one support: • bob@njm.co.uk • vicky@njm.co.uk • 0191 284 4949

More Related