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Forming a consortium. Why form a consortium?Who should be part of the consortium?What form should the consortium take?When do you need to put it in place?. Why form a consortium?. Opportunity to tender for contract with various requirements geographic coveragerange of skill setsavailability of
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2. Forming a consortium Why form a consortium?
Who should be part of the consortium?
What form should the consortium take?
When do you need to put it in place?
3. Why form a consortium? Opportunity to tender for contract with various requirements
geographic coverage
range of skill sets
availability of resource
size or scale of activity involved
Share risk / reward
but, some public bodies are not used to dealing with consortia
4. Who should be part of the consortium? Thoroughly examine tender requirements
Assess:
Services which your organisation can provide
Additional skills/ resource needed
Determine which organisations could provide necessary skills / resource
5. Initial considerations/strategic questions
Impact on stakeholders
Degree of alignment between the organisations mission/purpose and the mission/purpose of the consortium
What skills/experience is the organisation lacking?
What decisions will be made by the consortium as opposed to being made by the individual partners?
How does that impact on the organisations ability to manage risk? Developing a consortium
6. Developing a consortium Initial considerations/strategic questions (contd.)
Duration of the consortium contract
Effect on existing operations
Will it open up other potential opportunities?
Financial systems
Responsibility for financial systems
Allocation and management of responsibilities/liabilities
7. Developing a consortium Initial considerations/strategic questions (contd.)
Risks
Implications of performance failure
Exit strategy
Competitors - what unique selling point does your consortium have that will help you to win the contract? What unique selling point(s) does your competition have?
8. Developing a consortium Understand the difference between a grant and a contract for services
Legal structures - implications
9. What form should the consortium take? Contractual frameworks for service delivery
Frameworks involving a corporate body
Process for developing the legal framework
10. Contractual frameworks for service delivery Simplest model for forming a consortium
No new corporate structure
Detailed set of contractual terms and conditions among the members
11. Contractual frameworks for service delivery The consortium agreement will outline:
The duration of the relationship
The rights and duties of each of the parties
The scope of the project
Financing of the project
Agreed restrictions among the parties
Profit participation
Asset sharing
Exit provisions
12. Contractual frameworks for service delivery If two parties to the consortium, may be viable to have both as parties to the services contract
Where two or more service providers are parties to the same services contract, likely that the authority will impose joint & several liability
More likely that authority will insist on one lead partner single point of contact/interface
13. Lead partner of consortium Where lead partner is sole party to services contract:
lead partner will carry full liability to the authority for all obligations under the contract
lead partner will receive and distribute all payments from the authority under the contract
lead partner will have sole right to enforce obligations of the authority under the contract
lead partner will have control over exercising options under the contract, and control of all negotiations with the authority
14. Contractual frameworks for service delivery (cont) Back-to-back agreements between the lead partner and other parties to the consortium should cover the following:
Other parties to bear a proportion of liability where problem caused jointly by all members of the consortium; or full amount if that party caused the problem
Agreed split of responsibility as regards services to be delivered by each party
Agreed split of payments received from the authority
Mechanisms to ensure (where appropriate) that lead partner gives effect to joint decisions on eg negotiations with the authority
Risk exposure of lead partner may distort the dynamic of joint decision-making
15. Lead partner with joint steering group Variant of previous model
Same features plus joint steering group to act as a forum for joint decision making on matters of detailed delivery and to maintain the focus on the agreed objectives
Steering group would consist of representatives of the organisations forming the consortium
Lead partner would be contractually obliged to refer certain matters to steering group for discussion
Difficulties in compelling lead partner to comply with decision of steering group
16. Frameworks involving a corporate body Jointly-controlled corporate body takes the role of party to the contract with the authority
Nature of corporate body depends on:
aspirations of the parties as regards financial returns (profit-distributing or not)
nature of activities to be carried on by the corporate body (charitable status or not)
potential sources of funding (eligibility for support)
Contractual framework also requires to be put in place including clear rights/obligations of the parties as subcontractors/service providers to the joint corporate body
17. Frameworks involving a corporate body (cont) Key issues in developing the structure of the corporate body include:
Split of profits
Voting power at member/shareholder level
Representation at board level
Conflict of interest rules
Introduction of a new partner
Exit
Deadlock/default
18. Frameworks involving a corporate body (cont)
19. Frameworks involving a corporate body (cont) MODEL 2
20. Frameworks involving a corporate body (cont) Advantages / disadvantages of using a corporate body as consortium vehicle:
Limited liability possibility that local authority will seek guarantees directly from members
Separate legal entity can sue and be sued in its own name
Better for joint decision making / pooling of assets
Duties of directors to promote the success of consortium vehicle
Formal registration procedures
Additional set-up and running costs
Additional formality
Separate accounting requirements
21. Process for developing the legal framework Develop key principles, and main components within the overall structure
Identify key risks; and mechanisms for controlling risk
Most issues will be common to all parties in the consortium open dialogue/debate is usually best
Once proposals are reasonably well-developed, take a step back:
explore what-if scenarios, including possibility of another party exploiting position to its advantage
test proposals against your organisations best interests
When does it need to be put in place?
22. Questions
23. Contact Us Graeme Palmer
Associate
0141 273 6738
graeme.palmer@burness.co.uk