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VIEW FROM THE OTHER SIDE:
Public Sector Perspectives
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January 2005 (revised) |
A series of white papers
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Behind the Veil:
The Truth About Public Sector Procurements
In my opinion, most vendors over-estimate the
value of peripheral players in public sector
“IT” procurements. Vendors assume “internal”
peripheral players, such as the state CIO,
governor’s office and legislature, ultimately
decide which vendor wins a specific procurement.
This is not true, at least not in most states.
At best they play a minor, indirect role.
The state CIO and the governor’s senior staff
are important in relation to what problems will
be addressed through procurements and helping to
secure needed funding. The legislature’s role
is to adequately fund the solution, including
the procurement. All of these actions are done
before any procurement is issued and sometimes
can be influenced by “external” peripheral
players (vendors or lobbyists) through education
or political intervention.
Once a decision is made to proceed and the
funding is secured, the CIO normally asks staff
to prepare a request for proposal (RFP), which
is then vetted by the CIO to ensure compliance
with the established “IT” vision. Often,
agencies impacted by the procurement are invited
to participate as evaluators of the RFP. As
such, they probably will help craft or review a
draft of the RFP prior to its release. If the
draft RFP is presented to the vendor community
for comment there is an opportunity to suggest
changes to make the procurement more
competitive. However, self-interested
recommendations from any vendor likely will be
rejected.
Once the procurement is issued, the ability for
“external” players to influence the outcome is
very limited. When a vendor’s proposal is
selected, the only option for recourse
unsuccessful vendors have is to stop the
procurement or seek a re-bid. Normally that can
be accomplished through official protest or
“external” players seeding uncertainty with
either the Governor’s Office or the legislature
that the procurement process was unfair or the
solution is seriously flawed. Most likely the
legislature would need to convince the
Governor’s Office to cancel the procurement
since they have no direct control over
government operations, except as a funding
source.
The greatest value “external” players can have
in guiding procurements toward their solutions
begins early in the process, before the RFP is
issued. Developing a strategy in advance helps
the vendor’s team (including their lobbyists)
better assess the needs of the state, be
proactive seeding ideas for improvement, educate
concerning best practices and success stories,
and establish the vendor as a thought-leader.
There is value identifying key agency staff, in
addition to the CIO, that most likely will be
invited to be RFP evaluators on specific-type
procurements and continually educate these
individuals on the merits of the vendor and its
solutions. Obviously this needs to be done well
in advance of any RFP issuance. Bottom line—the
quality of a vendor's response to the RFP, as
perceived by the evaluation committee most
likely will determine the outcome of any
procurement. Therefore, the evaluation committee
has the most control over the outcome of any
procurement.
©2007, Gerhards Consulting Group. All rights reserved.