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CONTRACT MANAGEMENT

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Title: CONTRACT MANAGEMENT


1
  • CONTRACT MANAGEMENT

9/25/2013
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2
  • Terminology
  • Agent a person/group officially authorized to
    make decisions and represent their firm.
  • Arbitration Settling of a dispute by a third
    party who renders a decision.
  • Bid tender, offer, proposal to purchase a
    certain item.
  • Breach of Contract to violate a law by an act or
    omission or to break a legal obligation.
  • Contract an agreement entered into by two or
    more parties and the agreement can be enforced in
    a court of law.
  • Customer is used to denote the buying
    organization,
  • normally a government department or other
    public body.
  • Intelligent customer denotes a capability of the
    customer organization in understanding both
    customer and provider businesses fully.

3
  • End user the people who actually use the service
  • Force Majeure Clause a provision in a contract
    that excuses the parties involved from any
    liability or contractual obligations because of
    acts of God, wars, terrorism, etc.
  • Infringement a violation of someones legally
    recognized right.
  • Provider the company providing services under
    the contract.
  • Partnership and partnering denote a long term
    arrangement between a public sector department
    and a private sector company.
  • Liquidated Damages an amount specified in a
    contract that stipulates the reasonable
    estimation of damages that will occur as a result
    of a breach of contract.
  • Negligence the failure to exercise ones
    activity in such a manner that a reasonable
    person would do in a similar situation.

4
  • Noncompete Clause a covenant providing
    restrictions on starting up a competing business
    or working for a competitor within a specified
    time period.
  • Nondisclosure Clause a covenant providing
    restrictions on a certain proprietary information
    such that it cannot be disclosed without written
    permission.
  • Nonconformance performance of work in such a
    manner that it does not conform to contractual
    specifications/requirements.
  • Penalty Clause an agreement or covenant,
    identified in financial terms, for failure to
    perform.
  • Privity of Contract the relationship that exists
    between the buyer and seller of a contract.
  • Procurement the acquisition of goods or
    services.
  • Termination/Termination Liability an agreement
    between the buyer and the seller as to how much
    money the seller will receive should the project
    be terminated prior to the scheduled

5
  • completion date without all of the contractual
    deliverable being
  • Completed.
  • Waiver an intentional relinquishment of a legal
    right.
  • Warranty a promise, either verbal or written,
    that certain facts
  • are true as represented.
  • Contract Management is more comprehensive
    than/includes
  • Procurement Management

6
  • Introduction
  • The main areas covered are
  • managing service delivery
  • managing the relationship,
  • contract administration,
  • seeking performance improvements,
  • managing changes.
  • Long-term service contracts
  • Short-term service contract

7
  • What is contract management?
  • 1. It is the process that enables both parties to
    meet their obligations
  • in order to deliver the objectives required from
    the contract.
  • It also involves building a good working
    relationship between
  • customer and provider (Buyer/Seller).
  • 2. It is the art and science of managing a
    contractual agreement
  • throughout the contracting process.
  • The central aim of contract management is to
    obtain the services
  • as agreed in the contract and achieve value for
    money by
  • - Optimizing the efficiency, effectiveness and
    economy of the
  • service or relationship described by the
    contract,

9/25/2013
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  • - Balancing costs against risks and actively
    managing the
  • customerprovider relationship
  • - Aiming for continuous improvement in
    performance over the
  • life of the contract.
  • Contract Management Processes consist of the
    following activities
  • ? Presales Activity
  • ? Bid/No Bid Decision-Making
  • ? Bid/Proposal Preparation
  • ? Contract Negotiation and Formation
  • ? Contract Administration
  • ? Contract Closeout

9/25/2013
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  • Overview
  • Contract management activities can be broadly
    grouped into three areas.
  • Service delivery management ensures that the
    service is being delivered as agreed, to the
    required level of performance and quality.
  • Relationship management keeps the relationship
    between the two parties open and constructive,
    aiming to resolve or ease tensions and identify
    problems early.
  • Contract administration handles the formal
    governance of the contract and changes to the
    contract documentation.

10
  • Getting the contract right
  • The concern is on customer activities following
    the award of a
  • service, not the procurement process that leads
    up to the award of
  • contract.
  • The terms of the contract should include an
    agreed level of
  • service, pricing mechanisms, provider incentives,
    contract
  • timetable, means to measure performance,
    communication routes,
  • escalation procedures, change control procedures,
    agreed exit
  • strategy and agreed break options, and all the
    other formal
  • mechanisms that enable a contract to function.

11
  • Construction contracts
  • Construction contracts are fundamentally
    different from
  • major service contracts.
  • There are various types of construction contract.
    The
  • choice of contract depends on the basis of
    pricing and
  • the contract strategy that best meets the project
  • objectives, risk transfer, responsibility for
    performance,
  • cost certainty, and complexity.

12
  • Critical success factors
  • Good preparation.
  • The right contract.
  • Single business focus.
  • Service delivery management and contract
    administration.
  • Relationship management.
  • Continuous improvement.
  • People, skills and continuity.
  • Knowledge.
  • Flexibility.
  • Change management.
  • Proactivity.

9/25/2013
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  • What can go wrong, and why?
  • The provider is obliged to take control,
    resulting in unbalanced decisions that do not
    serve the customers interests
  • Decisions are not taken at the right time or
    not at all
  • New business processes do not integrate with
    existing processes, and therefore fail
  • People (in both organizations) fail to understand
    their
  • obligations and responsibilities
  • There are misunderstandings, disagreements and
    underestimations too many issues are escalated
    inappropriately
  • Progress is slow or there seems to be an
    inability to move forward

9/25/2013
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  • The intended benefits are not realized
  • Opportunities to improve value for money and
    performance are missed.
  • Why organizations fail to manage contracts
    successfully
  • Poorly drafted contracts
  • Inadequate resources are assigned to contract
    management
  • The customer team does not match the provider
    team in terms of either skills or experience (or
    both)
  • The wrong people are put in place, leading to
    personality clashes
  • The context, complexities and dependencies of the
    contract are not well understood

9/25/2013
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  • There is a failure to check provider assumptions
  • Authorities or responsibilities relating to
    commercial decisions are not clear
  • A lack of performance measurement or benchmarking
    by the customer
  • A focus on current arrangements rather than what
    is possible or the potential for improvement
  • A failure to monitor and manage retained risks
    (statutory, political and commercial).

9/25/2013
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  • Plan Procurements
  • Defining the need for the project
  • Development of the procurement statement of work,
    specifications, and work breakdown structure
  • Preparing a WBS dictionary, if necessary
  • Performing a make or buy analysis
  • Laying out the major milestones and the
    timing/schedule
  • Determining if long lead procurement is necessary
  • Cost estimating, including life-cycle costing
  • Determining whether qualified sellers exist
  • Identifying the source selection criteria
  • Preparing a listing of possible
    project/procurement risks (i.e., a risk register)
  • Developing a procurement plan
  • Obtaining authorization and approval to proceed

17
  • Specifications are written, pictorial, or graphic
    information that
  • describe, define, or specify the services or
    items to be procured.
  • There are three types of specifications
  • Design Specifications physical characteristics.
  • Performance Specifications measurable
    capabilities.
  • Functional Specifications description of the end
    use of the item.

18
  • Factors involving the make or buy analysis
  • The make decision
  • ? Less costly (but not always!!)
  • ? Easy integration of operations
  • ? Utilize existing capacity that is idle
  • ? Maintain direct control
  • ? Maintain design/production secrecy
  • ? Avoid unreliable supplier base
  • ? Stabilize existing workforce
  • The buy decision
  • ? Less costly (but not always!!)
  • ? Utilize skills of suppliers
  • ? Small volume requirement (not cost effective to
    produce)
  • ? Having limited capacity or capability
  • ? Augment existing labor force
  • ? Maintain multiple sources (qualified vendor
    list)
  • ? Indirect control

19
  • Procurement risks as identified in the ABB
    Project Management
  • Manual
  • ? Contract and agreements (penalty/liquidated
    damages,
  • specifications open to misinterpretation, vague
    wording,
  • permits/licenses, paperwork requirements)
  • ? Responsibility and liability (force majeure,
    liability limits for
  • each party, unclear scope limitations)
  • ? Financial (letters of credit, payment plans,
    inflation, currency
  • exchange, bonds)
  • ? Political (political stability, changes in
    legislation, import/export
  • restrictions, arbitration laws)
  • ? Warranty (nonstandard requirements, repairs)
  • ? Schedule (unrealistic delivery time, work by
    others not finished
  • on time, approval process, limitations on
    available resources)
  • ? Technical and technology (nonstandard
    solutions, quality
  • assurance regulations, inspections, customer
    acceptance criteria)
  • ? Resources (availability, skill levels, local
    versus external)

20
  • The procurement plan will address the following
    questions
  • How much procurement will be necessary?
  • Will they be standard or specialized procurement
    activities?
  • Will we make some of the products or purchase all
    of them?
  • Will there be qualified suppliers?
  • Will we need to pre-qualify some of the
    suppliers?
  • Will we use open bidding or bidding from a
    preferred supplier list?
  • How will we manage multiple suppliers?
  • Are there items that require long lead
    procurement?
  • What type of contract will be used, considering
    the contractual risks?
  • Will we need different contract types for
    multiple suppliers?
  • What evaluation criteria will be used to score
    the proposals?

21
  • Conducting the Procurement
  • Evaluating/confirming specifications (are they
    current?)
  • Confirming qualified sources
  • Reviewing past performance of sources
  • Reviewing of team or partnership agreements
  • Producing the solicitation package
  • A typical solicitation package would include
  • ? Bid documents (usually standardized)
  • ? Listing of qualified vendors (expected to bid)
  • ? Proposal evaluation criteria (source selection
    criteria)
  • ? Bidder conferences
  • ? How change requests will be managed
  • ? Supplier payment plan

22
  • Points of proposal evaluation scoring for
    awarding a
  • contract to bidders
  • Understanding of the requirements
  • Overall bid price
  • Technical superiority
  • Management capability
  • Previous performance (or references)
  • Financial strength (ability to stay in business)
  • Intellectual property rights
  • Production capacity (based upon existing
    contracts and potential new contracts)

23
  • Request Seller Responses
  • There are three common methods for acquisition
  • Advertising sealed bids, no negotiations.
  • Negotiation
  • ? Request for information (RFI)
  • ? Request for quotation (RFQ)
  • ? Request for proposal (RFP)
  • ? Invitation for bids (IFB)
  • Small purchases (i.e., office supplies)

24
  • Selecting Appropriate Sellers
  • Evaluation criteria time, cost, expected
    management team of the project, and previous
    performance history
  • Contract award strategy price-based/best-value.
  • A negotiation process 3 major factors of
    negotiations
  • ? Compromise ability
  • ? Adaptability
  • ? Good faith
  • Negotiations should be planned for
  • Develop objectives (i.e., min-max positions)
  • Evaluate your opponent
  • Define your strategy and tactics
  • Gather the facts
  • Perform a complete price/cost analysis
  • Arrange hygiene factors

25
  • There are certain basic elements of most
    contracts
  • Mutual Agreement There must be an offer and
    acceptance.
  • Consideration There must be a down payment.
  • Contract Capability The contract is binding only
    if the contractor has the capability to perform
    the work.
  • Legal Purpose The contract must be for a legal
    purpose.
  • Form Provided by Law The contract must reflect
    the contractors legal obligation, or lack of
    obligation, to deliver end products.

26
  • The two most common contract forms are
  • Completion Contract definitive end product.
  • Term Contract a specific level of effort.
  • The type of contract selected is based upon the
    following
  • ? Overall degree of cost and schedule risk
  • ? Type and complexity of requirement (technical
    risk)
  • ? Extent of price competition
  • ? Urgency of the requirements
  • ? Performance period
  • ? Contractors responsibility (and risk)
  • ? Contractors accounting system (is it capable
    of earned value reporting?)
  • ? Concurrent contracts (will my contract take a
    back seat to existing work?)
  • ? Extent of subcontracting (how much work will
    the contractor outsource?)

27
  • Some Terminology found in contracts
  • The target cost or estimated cost
  • Target or expected profit
  • Profit ceiling and profit floor
  • Price ceiling or ceiling price
  • Maximum and minimum fees
  • The sharing arrangement or formula
  • Point of total assumption

28
  • A wide variety of contractual arrangements
  • Cost-plus percentage fee
  • Cost-plus fixed fee
  • Cost-plus guaranteed maximum
  • Cost-plus guaranteed maximum and shared savings
  • Cost-plus incentive (award fee)
  • Cost and cost sharing
  • Fixed price or lump sum
  • Fixed price with re-determination
  • Fixed price incentive fee
  • Fixed price with economic price adjustment
  • Fixed price incentive with successive targets

29
  • Fixed price for services, material, and labor at
    cost (purchase orders, blanket agreements)
  • Time and material/labor hours only
  • Bonus-penalty
  • Combinations
  • Joint venture

30
  • There are generally five types of contracts
  • 1. Fixed-price (FP), or lump-sum,
  • 2. Cost-plus-fixed-fee (CPFF), or
    cost-plus-percentage-fee (CPPF),
  • 3. Guaranteed maximum-shared savings (GMSS),
  • 4. Fixed-price-incentive-fee (FPIF),
  • 5. Cost-plus-incentive-fee (CPIF)
  • Other types of contracts that are not used
    frequently
  • 1. The fixed-price incentive successive targets
    contract
  • 2. The fixed-price with re-determination contract
  • 3. Cost (CR) and cost-sharing (CS) contracts

31
  • Incentive Contracts
  • The fixed-price-incentive-fee (FPIF) contract is
    an example of this.
  • The essence of the incentive contract is that it
    offers a contractor
  • more profit if costs are reduced or performance
    is improved and less
  • profit if costs are raised or if performance
    goals are not met. Cost
  • incentives take the form of a sharing formula
    generally expressed as
  • a ratio.
  • In the FPIF contract, the contractor agrees to
    perform a service at a
  • given fixed cost. If the total cost is less than
    the target cost, then the
  • contractor has made a profit according to the
    incentive-fee formula.
  • If the total cost exceeds the target cost, then
    the contractor loses money.

32
  • Contract administration
  • contract maintenance and change control,
  • charges and cost monitoring,
  • ordering and payment procedures,
  • management reporting, and so on.
  • Its importance should not be underestimated.
  • All parties understand who does what, when, and
    how.
  • The contract documentation reflects the
    arrangement,
  • and changes to it carefully controlled.

33
  • Contract Administration Cycle
  • The functions of the corporate administrator
    include
  • ? Change management
  • ? Specification interpretation
  • ? Adherence to quality requirements
  • ? Inspections and audits
  • ? Warranties
  • ? Performance reporting
  • ? Records management
  • ? Contractor (seller) management
  • ? Contractor (seller) performance report card
  • ? Documenting sellers performance (for future
    source selection teams)
  • ? Production surveillance

34
  • ? Approval of waivers
  • ? Breach of contract
  • ? Claims administration
  • ? Resolution of disputes
  • ? Payment schedules
  • ? Project termination
  • ? Project closure
  • The order of precedence specifies that any
    inconsistency in the
  • solicitation of the contract shall be resolved in
    a given order of
  • procedure such as
  • A. Specifications (first priority)
  • B. Other instructions (second priority)

35
  • C. Other documents, such as exhibits,
    attachments, appendices,
  • SOW, contract data requirements list (CDRL), etc.
    (third priority)
  • D. Contract clauses (fourth priority)
  • E. The schedule (fifth priority)
  • The changes handled by the contract
    administrator
  • ? Administrative change
  • ? Change order
  • ? Contract modification
  • ? Undefinitized contractual action
  • ? Supplemental agreement
  • ? Constructive change

36
  • Typical causes of constructive changes include
  • ? Defective specification with impossibility of
    performance
  • ? Erroneous interpretation of contract
  • ? Over inspection of work
  • ? Failure to disclose superior knowledge
  • ? Acceleration of performance
  • ? Late or unsuitable owner or customer furnished
    property
  • ? Failure to cooperate
  • ? Improperly exercised options
  • ? Misusing proprietary data

37
  • Reasons for termination for convenience of the
    customer
  • ? Elimination of the requirement
  • ? Technological advances in the state-of-the-art
  • ? Budgetary changes
  • ? Related requirements and/or procurements
  • ? Anticipating profits not allowed
  • Reasons for termination for default due to
    contractors actions
  • ? Failure to make delivery on scheduled date.
  • ? Failure to make progress so as to endanger
    performance of the
  • contract and its terms.
  • ? Failure to perform any other provisions of the
    contract.

38
  • Contract Closure
  • ? Documented verification that the output was
    accepted
  • by the buyer
  • ? Debriefing the seller on their overall
    performance
  • ? Documenting sellers performance (documentation
  • will be used in future source selections when
    evaluating
  • contractors past performance)
  • ? Identifying room for improvement on future
    contracts
  • ? Archiving all necessary project documentation
  • ? Performing a lessons-learned review
  • ? Identifying best practices

39
  • Contract Management and Claim Management
  • This is a tool for managing and dealing with
    suppliers, contracts,
  • variation orders, and accounts.
  • Also the Contract Management and Claim Management
    have
  • modules in instruction of bonds, insurances, and
    warranties. You
  • can also accredit the proposal documents,
    contract, variation order
  • documents, and default lists (in MS-Word or
    MS-EXCEL) to
  • contracts.
  • Reports in the projects statuss about the
    supplier, contract status
  • report, difference of orders and causes, invoice
    ledgers and
  • compilations, project status etc strengthen the
    Contract
  • Management and Claim Management. Photo
    documentation can
  • be a qualified structure where the categories are
    defined to the user

40
  • (like General, Work Progress, Defaults, etc), and
    can be chosen
  • from and sorted according to multiple criteria.
  • The module invoices permits the input of normal
    invoices as well
  • as cumulative (interim), partial-final and final
    statements.
  • The Contract Management and Claim Management
    takes note the
  • chances to go into contract risks (expected
    variation orders,
  • variation of quantities, claims at hand,
    assessment of excluded
  • risks) which will be summed together through the
    commitment
  • values so it can be alerted on time of a possible
    over costing.

41
  • Contract Management
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