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Selling to the Public Sector – helping Leicestershire SMEs unlock their potential. Bob Moodie NJM European, Economic & Management Consultants Limited. The Challenge. According to the latest figures only 16% of the total value of public contracts go to SMEs.
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Selling to the Public Sector – helping Leicestershire SMEs unlock their potential Bob Moodie NJM European, Economic & Management Consultants Limited
The Challenge According to the latest figures only 16% of the total value of public contracts go to SMEs. 75% of SMEs rarely or never bid for public sector work
Where to find information/opportunities Preferred suppliers We’re too young (we lack trading history /track record) Lack of previous public sector experience Price Lack of bid skills We’re too small (contract is too big as a proportion of our turnover) The timescale is too tight Difficult to access purchasers Process is time-consuming, costly and complex PQQ qualifiers – policies & procedures Location and point of service Difficult to find consortia to bid with
Responding to the Challenge: Be Strategic The Key Themes in Today’s Workshop • The Procurement Context • Identifying opportunities and raising business profile • When to bid and when not to bid • Preparing PQQs and tenders In the present competitive environment it is vital to understand that only a very professional approach at all levels of the process will suffice if you want to be successful
The Procurement Context: Regulatory Framework EU Procurement Directives Government Strategy Statutory Requirements Council Procedures Local Agreements
Context & Opportunity • Public procurement, 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.
Procurement Process Overview Procure Contract Notice EOI PQQ Tender Commission Manage Evaluate Review Award
A Strategic Approach Identifying Opportunities & Raising Your Profile
Be Systematic & Get Organised • What is your target market? • In your target market who are the key buyers - Personnel at Department level and Procurement Officers (important for low value contracts that are not formally advertised)? • Engage procurement personnel - make sure they know you exist, seed ideas • Find out about approved (accredited) supplier lists • Register and publish on tender e-portals • Network (buyers/commissioners, meet the buyer events)
Be Systematic & Get Organised • Set up internal processes and individual(s) to monitor tender portals, alerts, sources and review feedback • Search for potential business partners / collaborators / subcontractors • Develop / improve your key policies e.g. Make them relevant and articulating business benefit • Accreditation (e.g. CHAS, ISO, IiP etc) • Bid writing is a skill – invest the time in developing the capability
A Strategic Approach To bid or not to bid?
Strategic Decision Making • Is the tender a good fit in relation to your company’s activities? • Can you meet the eligibility criteria (technical qualifications, policy compliance e.g. Quality Assurance, Insurance) ? • Do you have a good track record in relation to the opportunity? • Do you have the trading history (e.g. 2 years Accounts)? • Do you have the capability and capacity to deliver the contract if successful? • Can you make sense of the budget and can you deliver the contract on time?
Strategic Decision Making • What are the risks? • Who are your competitors? • What percentage of your turnover does the contract represent? • Do you need a partner(s) or will you use subcontractors? • What is the percentage chance of success? • Do you have the time and resources to devote to preparing a good bid?
Strategic Decision Making Solo or Collaborative Bidding? • Form a consortium if: • You don’t have the capability or capacity • You can’t meet the 20% rule • Options: • Consortium • Joint Bidding • Lead Contractor & Subcontractor • Legal basics • Memorandum of understanding (MoU) / Partnership agreement / (Non Disclosure agreement (NDA); Agreement not to compete in other tender) • Service level agreement (SLA)/contract
A Strategic Approach Preparing the Bid
Preparing the PQQ/Tender • Make sure you download/print off ALL tender documents and read them carefully (multiple times) • Note the tender instructions, e.g. word limits, submission format, deadlines and evaluation criteria
Preparing the PQQ/Tender • Get your team together, appoint a bid manager and conduct detailed review and interpretation of tender requirements. • 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. Be aware that any question you ask will be notified to other suppliers) • Prepare work plan & allocation of roles/tasks/milestones with reference to tender & submission deadline. • NB: Build in time to review, refine and style bid
Preparing the PQQ/Tender What is the Buyer looking for? • Demonstrate a clear understanding of the brief (i.e. the challenges are understood and addressed) • Design a clearly structured tender response aligned against each tender requirement and criteria (e.g. core, gateway and specific). Ensure compliance! • Methodology: clearly show who does what, why, when, how and benefits from buyer’s perspective). • Identify and demonstrate clearly your capability and the innovation of your offer (USP) - can your offer exceed the contract requirements and provide additional benefits, outcomes?
Preparing the PQQ/Tender • Properly define appropriate resources / organisation (CVs of identified team members / subcontractors / partners & management structure). • Project Plan (Schedule of Deliverables, Milestones and Resource and illustrate with diagram where possible i.e. Gantt Chart) • Explain Contract management and communication (i.e. how you interface with the client to monitor project) • Risk Assessment (illustrate how you provide buyer with a low risk solution) • Articulate pricing and value for money • Compliance (Policies – NB You may be asked to explain your policy commitments)
Preparing the PQQ/Tender Standing Out from the Crowd • Have you articulated ‘Why choose us?’ • Have you fully defined the key features, quality and benefits of your approach? • Have you used and made the most of recent and relevant case studies to illustrate your track record? • Have you presented advantages over your competitors? • Have you gone the extra mile in manifesting your understanding of the brief and the design of your solution?
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
Preparing the PQQ/Tender • Do not attempt to find an “inside track” (canvassing) • Respond by the correct date + time (electronic, electronic + post, post?) avoid last minute submissions • Ensure the submission is complete AND signed including copies of requested documentation, e.g. insurance certificates, policies, audited accounts etc • Use tender envelope/label if provided and check if there is a tender reference • Look carefully at the evaluation criteria, scores and “weighting”. This should influence time and effort in preparation of answers
Preparing the Tender: Bid Writing Language & Style: • Write in plain English • Avoid jargon and unexplained abbreviations • Use ‘active’ and not ‘passive‘ verbs, refer to ‘we’ and ‘you’ • Short sentences and paragraphs; use introductory headers • Punctuation and spelling really matter Aim for clarity, brevity, readability and persuasion !
♪♫♪ Accentuate the Positive ♪♫♪ What QA does your company operate? If no accreditation is held please explain why not and what alternative steps you take to ensure quality at work? Bad Answer: • “We operate our own quality system. We have determined that formal accreditation is inappropriate to our company’s needs. Complaints are the responsibility of the Managing Director.” Good Answer: • “We regard quality as a vitally important part of our business activity and we operate a comprehensive and strict internal quality assurance process covering all aspects of our business activity (details can be found in Appendix 2). We are committed to a process of continuous improvement and we are in the process of applying for ISO 9001 (we expect to be assessed in May of this year)”
Avoiding a Poor Score Common reasons for a poor score: • Failure to follow the instructions. • Writing by committee, no narrative flow and lack of control/ownership • Incomplete or missing answers/sections. • Supporting documentation incomplete • Repeating answers or referring to ‘see above’ (questions are rarely repeated) • Over emphasising what you sell, rather than what they are looking to buy • Recycling old tenders ‘Cutting & pasting’! • Generic PQQ/Tender response • Providing response on general capability instead as opposed to specific contract requirements.
Further one to one support: • bob@njm.co.uk • vicky@njm.co.uk • 0191 284 4949