To better help you prepare for responsibilities of vendor and procurement management, let’s review the type of skills and knowledge a project manager should possess to be effective in these areas. The key project management skills needed for procurement and vendor management include the following:
- Managing expectations
- Effective verbal and written communications
- Managing virtual and cross-cultural teams
- Defining a project
- Proficient negotiating
- Vendor selection and evaluation
- Strong interpersonal skills
- The ability to identify risks and develop appropriate responses (managing risks)
- Contract knowledge
- The ability to manage to a contract
- Understanding when and how to use legal assistance
- Managing changes
Stuff You Need to Know About Contracts
I mentioned earlier that contract knowledge is a key project management skill for procurement and vendor management. So, what exactly do I mean by contract knowledge? Although there is no substitution for actual experience, in-depth study, and formal training, here is a quick synopsis of the key contract facts that you need to understand to improve your effectiveness in this area of project management.
Conditions for a Legal Contract
The four conditions that make a contract a legally binding agreement are the following:
- It must be voluntarily entered into.
- It must contain mutual consideration.
- It must be created for legal purposes.
- It must be signed by authorized parties.
Key Contract Elements
Not every contract is the same, and not every contract will contain all these sections (they might not apply), but the common contract components include the following:
- Scope statement, including deliverables, requirements, out-of-scope items, and assumptions
- Timetable and milestone dates
- Acceptance criteria
- Responsibilities of each party
- Financial arrangements, including payment schedule, invoicing arrangements, and incentives
- Identification of the person authorized to make changes
- Change control procedures
- Issue resolution and escalation procedures
- Performance measurement and reporting
- Communications plan, such as status reporting, senior management meetings
- Procedures or penalties for ending the contract prematurely
- Liability for failure to perform
- Ownership and property rights of project deliverables
- Security agreements
- Nondisclosure agreements
Primary Contract Types
The three common contract types are as follows:
- Time and materials (T&M)
- Fixed price (FP)
- Cost reimbursable (CR)
The three variations of cost-reimbursable contracts are as follows:
- Cost Plus Fixed Fee (CPFF)
- Cost Plus Percent of Cost (CPPC)
- Cost Plus Incentive Fee (CPIF)
A common variation of T&M contracts is to cap the top end (T&M with a Cap).
The Impact of Each Contract Type
In the previous section, we mentioned the three key contract types. In this section, we review the points you need to understand about each type. The key categories include the following:
- The contract’s advantages and disadvantages
- What situation is best for the contract’s use
- Who owns the risk
- The required project management tasks
Table 21.1 summarizes these key facts about each contract type.
TABLE 21.1 Summary of Contract Types
T&M | FP | CR | |
---|---|---|---|
Advantages | Quick to create.Brief duration.Good choice when hiring people to augment your staff. | Less work for buyer to manage.Seller has strong incentive to control costs.Buyer knows total project price.Companies are familiar with this type.Can include incentives. | Simpler scope of work.SOW is easier than one for an FP.Lower cost than FP because the seller does not need to add as much for the risk.Can include incentives. |
Disadvantages | Profit in every hour billed.Seller has no incentive to control costs.Good only for small projects.Requires most day-to-day oversight by the buyer. | Seller might underquote and make up profits with change orders.Seller might reduce work scope if it is losing money.More work for the buyer to write the SOW.Can be more costly than CR if the SOW is incomplete.Seller will increase the price to cover risk. | Must audit seller’s invoices.More work for buyer to manage.Seller has only moderate incentive to control costs.Total project price is unknown. |
Best to use when… | You need work to begin right away.You need to augment staff. | You know exactly what needs to be done.You don’t have time to audit invoices. | You want to buy expertise in determining what needs to be done. |
Who has the risk? | The buyer. | The seller (cost), or both the buyer and seller if not well defined. | The buyer. |
Scope of work detail | Brief.Limited functional, performance, or design requirements. | Extremely complete.Seller needs to know all the work.“Do it.” | Describes only performance or requirements.“How to do it.” |
Project management tasks | Providing daily direction to seller.Striving for concrete deliverables.Close monitoring of project schedule.Looking for a situation to switch the contract type. | Establishing clear acceptance criteria of deliverables.Managing change requests.Monitoring project task dependencies.Managing risks.Monitoring project assumptions. | Auditing seller’s costs.Monitoring seller work progress.Ensuring added resources add value to the project.Watching for shifting resources.Watching for unplanned seller charges.Rebudgeting. |
The Absolute Minimum
At this point, you should have a solid understanding of the following:
- Solid project management is essential to reducing risk and improving quality on outsourced projects.
- Vendor management is composed of four distinct elements:
- Evaluation and selection
- Contract development
- Relationship management
- Delivery management
- Effective vendor management requires more formality with regard to communications and change control.
- Do not assume anything. If it is important to you or your organization, put it in the contract.
- Focus on “win-win” to build better vendor relationships.
- Make sure the vendor has the same goals that you do. Use incentives to align their goals with yours.
- Make sure the WBS is appropriate for effective outsourcing.
The map in Figure 21.1 summarizes the main points.
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