A lire sur: http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/tech-manager/are-your-tender-requirements-killing-your-it-project/8286
Plenty of organizations have well-formed
procedures for procurement on large projects, but when the projects are
small, the contracts are short-term, or the budget is low, those same
procedures can easily become a crippling overhead to both sides of the
procurement process.
Whether you’re sourcing training, software, hosting or bespoke
development, an RFT (Request For Tender) with unnecessary, unrealistic,
or just over-the-top requirements can make it too hard for some
companies to commit the time required just to do the paperwork. In
extreme cases you end up with vendors that specialize in meeting tender
requirements instead of specializing in the service they’re pitching to
provide.
Here are my five tips for reducing the pain of running a tender process for smaller projects:
1. Focus on the outcomes not the how to’s
You may have a solution in mind when penning a RFT, especially if
you’ve worked on similar projects in the past. However, treating the
solution you’d expect as a requirement can be a mistake. Remember that
the whole point of a tender is that it lets suppliers pitch on price and
solution. Concentrate on the specific outcomes the project has to
achieve and the standards that need to be met, and leave the “how” for
the vendors to figure out; it’s their job anyway.
2. Avoid legacy and CYA requirements
Be careful of setting standards and requirements based on past
vendors rather than the current project. It’s easy to do and not always
deliberate as people will associate particular
skills/resources/approaches etc with previous success without even
realizing it. Also be wary of requirements intended to make sure that
any successful tender will be easy to defend to upper management. Such
requirements may seem like a good idea but they can exclude companies
with better solutions from entering your vendor pool. If the tender is
good you won’t have trouble defending its selection.
3. Don’t make writing the tender a job in its own right
Asking too much from a vendor in the tender process can make your
tender less appealing. Asking a vender to supply an example financial
statement with its tender is fine if you really need to ensure the long
term financial stability of the vendor, but it penalizes and offends
some smaller vendors unnecessarily. Asking for too much material as part
of the tender itself can also be seen as a sink of
non-income-generating-time for your vendors. A good litmus test is to
not ask for anything you aren’t going to read fully. If you plan on just
skimming something, then ask for the summary not a book.
4. Don’t discount LVV (low value vendors)
Small companies don’t necessarily mean lower quality. They can be
small because they cater to a specialization or a particular niche. Take
the time to separate your expectations of the project from your mental
image of the perfect vendor. The same goes with new companies and start
ups, they may have other ways to satisfy concerns over capacity and
quality other than being the biggest or oldest company on the list.
5. Carefully review the IP requirements
Intellectual Property is a huge issue in IT project and the default
position in most RFTs is that the client wants to own everything. While
it sounds like the logical thing to ask, it’s often not necessary. Do
you really need to own all the IP? Or do you simply need the full rights
to use and modify it without attribution? Are you going to market the
system or just use it in house? Does it need to be proprietary code or
can some libraries/components be open source? Not insisting on total
ownership when it’s not needed can drastically increase what a vendor
can do within a budget. Take the time to look through the creative
commons licensing definitions if you need inspiration.
Bottom line
If your project is small in budget or scale then you need to make
sure that your RFT is small-vendor friendly. The demands you make of
large vendors may be impractical on smaller projects and end up costing
time and money you don’t have. However, if you take the time to be clear
on what you really need and step away from your preconceptions you’ll
find your vendor pool is fresher and more competitive. Just keep in mind
that for the vender, getting a tender accepted should be the start of
the hard work not the end of it.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire