Title: Guide to procurement
1Guide to procurement
- Presented by Tony Wiltshire
2Session Overview
- Your view of procurement?
- Procurement at Leeds
- Procurement Essentials
- The Procurement Cycle
- Supply Positioning Technique
- Procurement Spend Analysis
- Role of Politicians in Procurement
3- What is YOUR view of Procurement?
4A modern view?
- Responsible for direct and measurable savings
- Commercial negotiations with suppliers
- Continuous improvement programs
- Contract and risk management
- Cost avoidance programs
- Market segmentation and supply positioning
- Part of a multi-disciplinary team
- Key to successful strategy delivery
5Or something like this?
- Deals in low value orders and commodities
- No added value adds delay
- Handles the paperwork
- Controls rather than enables
- Subset of the finance function
- An overhead outweighing savings
- Stand-alone administrative function
- Any one can do procurement
6 7Procurement at Leeds
- Procurement Information
- 800m spent on external goods works and services
- 600,000 invoices p.a. (450,000 lt 250)
- 35,000 paper invoices (3 telephone directories
/mth) - 2000 approved contractors
- 40 corporate framework contracts
- 40,000 creditors
- Procurement Resources
- Corporate Procurement Unit
- Public and Private Partnership Unit
- Departmental Resources (e.g. ADS, Social
Services)
8Procurement Regulations
- EC Procurement Rules (Legal Requirement)
- Thresholds
- Works 3.8m, Services Supplies 154k
- Three Procedures
- Open, Restricted and Negotiated
- Contract Procedure Rules (LCCs Rules)
- Fair, Transparent, Legal, Value for Money
- Other related legislation
- E.g. TUPE (staff transfers), Health and Safety,
Equalities, etc.
9 10Procurement Essentials
- Corporate arrangements that create the capacity
and capability necessary for successful
procurement, contract management and supplier
relationships - A procurement process that is built around the
procurement cycle, a structured approach to
project and risk management and legal
requirements - Contract management, planned well in advance,
that it is about ensuring benefits (outcomes) are
delivered, continuous improvement and sound
relationships with suppliers as well as controls.
11Procurement EssentialsCorporate Arrangements
- Leadership
- Procurement Strategy
- Procurement policies and procedures
- Register of contracts
- Ethics and fraud prevention
- Procurement skills
- Centre of expertise
- Management information
- Performance measurement
- Supplier intelligence
- Supplier relationships
- Collaboration
- Promoting diversity and competition
- Resourcing projects
- Business case culture
- Community benefits
12Procurement EssentialsProcurement and Contract
Management
- Project management
- Project organisation
- Risk management
- Procurement cycle
- Gateway review process
- Contract management
- Supplier relationship management
13 14The Procurement Cycle
1. Determine Need 2. Procurement
Planning 3. Specify
Requirement 4. Source the
Market 5. Assess
Capability 6. Terms and
Conditions 7. Enquiry,
ITT, RFQ, etc 8.
Quotation, Tender or Bid 9.
Evaluation 10. Clarification
and Negotiation 11. Award of Contract
22. Management Information
21. Payment
20. Performance Review 19. Use by
Customer 18. Store and Control
17. Acceptance 16.
Receipt 15. Transportation/Timing
14. Quality Control
13. Expediting 12.
Acknowledgement
15Upstream Emphasis
- Upstream adds value
- Planning, specification, supplier selection
- Risk assessment, contingencies, negotiation
- Contract features
- Downstream adds cost
- Measurement, expediting, returns
- Transactional elements
- Disposal
16- The Supply Positioning Technique
17What do we buy?
Risk
Ensure supplies e.g. Specialist
care, Specialist component Or services
Contract/Supplier Management e.g.
outsourcing, Waste management, Care provision
Bottleneck
Strategic
Minimum attention e.g. stationery, Courier
services, Cleaning materials
Drive for Savings e.g. IT, Vehicles, Utilities,
advertising, Temporary staff
Routine
Leverage
Value
18Managing Procurement Activity
Risk
Market development Raising attractiveness Ensuring
supply
Contract Management Performance and
Benchmarking Negotiation Innovation Cost avoidance
Decentralised to Services
Bottleneck
Strategic
Corporate contracts (enforced) Automation Except
ion Management Technology Long-term
contracts Aggregation
E-Sourcing Quick wins Short-term
contracts Standardisation and Aggregation Market
awareness
Routine
Leverage
Centralised / Corporate
Value
19Making Savings
Risk
Invest in securing supply NO SAVINGS Cost
Avoidance
Value for Money Cost Avoidance
Bottleneck
Strategic
Efficiency Savings Aggregation
Aggregation Quick Wins Take Advantage
Routine
Leverage
Value
20How Suppliers See Buyers
Account importance
Development
Core
Nuisance
Exploitable
Spend
21- Procurement Spend Analysis
22Components of a Spend Analysis
- Who are the suppliers
- Who are the buyers
- What are we buying
- Individual items and categories
- Spending profiles
- Value, quantity, frequency, etc
- How are we buying
- Under common contracts?
23Why the Analysis is Important
- Set realistic and achievable savings targets
- Understand the range of things procured
- Obtain an overview of our supplier base
- Understand who is procuring and how
- Develop procurement strategies, policies and
systems - Baseline measures and key performance indicators
24- Politicians Role in Procurement
- Leadership, decision-making and scrutiny
25Politicians Role in Procurement
- Adopting Corporate Procurement Strategy aligned
with strategic outcomes - Overseeing corporate arrangements for procurement
and contract management - Promoting the use of gateway reviews
- Monitoring Performance of partnerships and other
key contracts - Learning lessons from major projects and
partnerships - Leading best value reviews of procurement and
contract management
26Politicians Role in ProcurementOverview and
Scrutiny
- Conducting inquiries into new models of service
delivery - Reviewing areas of high spend to identify
opportunities for improved value for money - Challenging the progress of major procurement
projects
- Reviewing the performance of partnerships and
other key contracts - Ensuring that lessons are learnt from major
projects and partnerships
27 Best Value Procurement
- Policy and Strategy
- Structure and Organisation
- Skills and Capabilities
- Information Systems
- Tools and Techniques
- Procurement Arrangements
- Controls and Standards
- Performance Monitoring
28 Policy and Strategy
- Procurement is legal, ethical and transparent
- Manage supply chains and develop better
relationships - Reduce the cost of the procurement process
- Obtain value for money
- Continuously improve the procurement process
- Promote local sourcing and local employment
- Seek out and evaluate best practice
- Reduce the occurrence of contractual disputes
- Promote social policy objectives
29 Structure and Organisation
- Sphere of activity and terms of reference.
- Areas of activity - strategy and operational
- Staff supplemented by officers with skills
currently lacking - Independent person to act as a single point of
enquiry for suppliers - Partner style relationship with the Chamber of
Commerce - Nominated officers have departmental
responsibility for procurement and meet as a
Procurement Best Practice Forum - Organisation be funded from central resources
30 Skills and Capabilities
- Personal development plans established
- Training via national vocational qualifications
- One-day seminars delivered on a train the
trainer basis - A skills audit be carried out of all those
involved in procurement initially for all
levels/disciplines - Procurement be incorporated into existing
management training programmes - A training programme be delivered to politicians
and suppliers - A political procurement champion be nominated
31Information Systems
- Strategy for the introduction of e-procurement
systems (graduated basis) with a
consultation/training programme for suppliers
carried out beforehand - Introduction of purchasing cards
- Detailed analysis be carried out on current
financial systems to ascertain whether they can
provide necessary procurement management
information - Intranet and Internet be developed into a best
practice/standard document resource for all - Develop an electronic contract information system
so that people can find best deals
32Tools and Techniques
- Standard tender evaluation model developed so
tenders are evaluated on best value principles - Contractor performance monitoring strengthened
- Rationalisation of Approved Lists System
- Develop relationships with suppliers
- Move away from contract guarantee bonds
- A strategy be developed to counteract false
information including IS0 9000 certifications
33Procurement Arrangements
- E-instruction manual to standardise approaches to
procurement projects including options appraisal,
market testing, outsourcing, partnering, project
management, market management - Establish a series of framework agreements and
contracts for all types of procurement
34Controls and Standards
- Mechanism to ensure that all officers involved in
procurement are aware of the rules affecting them
- local, national, EU - Standard template documents covering all aspects
of procurement be produced and made readily
available, with controlled revisions - Series of regular training courses be provided on
the relevant rules and how they work
35Performance Monitoring
- ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 be integrated within the
management framework - Introduction of e-procurement - set targets to
reduce paper invoices and payments - A procurement savings register
- Strategic performance indicators are established
and systems developed to supply the necessary
information
36Strategic Performance Indicators
- EFQM Business Excellence Score
- Client satisfaction score
- expenditure with approved suppliers
- expenditure under framework contracts
- Number of approved suppliers per TL/ euro of
total expenditure - Staff costs as of approved expenditure
- Number of complaints/ challenges in period
- total expenditure on procurement cards
- total expenditure by e-procurement
- Number of contracts awarded by e-commerce
- of total expenditure via partnerships
- total expenditure through local sourcing
- Total estimated savings in period
37Performance Monitoring ctd
- That the following operational performance
indicators are established, and that systems are
developed to collect the necessary supporting
information - Average contract management satisfaction score
- Shopping basket price performance
- Average price variation against retail price
index - Average tender response rate
- Average difference between lowest and highest
tender prices - Number of adverse performance reports in period
38Participant Exercise
- 5 stages of the procurement process
- Plan
- Tender
- Evaluate
- Award
- Manage
39Questions
tony.wiltshire_at_leeds.gov.uk