Title: Redesigning Public Procurement
1Redesigning Public Procurement
- Presentation to 2nd Annual Summit on
- E-Procurement for Government
- January 24, 2002
- Vern A. Burkhardt
2Redesigning Public Procurement
- The Business Imperatives
- Trends Impacting Government Procurement
- Planning Re-engineering of Procurement
- Justifying the Investment
- Selecting E-procurement Solution
- The British Columbia Experience
3The Business Imperatives
- Improve efficiency and reduce costs
- Streamline and improve work processes
- Increase quality and timeliness of services
- Leverage infrastructure investment
- Meet policy imperatives (fair and open tendering)
4Trends Impacting Procurement in Government
- Growth in electronic delivery of Government
services - Increased outsourcing
- Increased procurement of services and human
capital versus goods - Productivity gains using IT solutions
- Increased size, market position and negotiating
strength of suppliers
5Trends (cont.)
- Increased purchasing leverage while enabling
decentralization of procurement - Specialized skills required (e.g., negotiation,
strategic sourcing, IT) - Increased expectations for quality and timeliness
- Increased budget pressures
6Planning for Re-engineering of Procurement
Processes
- Executive commitment and sponsorship
- Clear deliverables
- Stakeholder involvement
- Secure required resources
7Planning for Re-engineering
- Manage risks
- Identify opportunities for high ROI
- Strategy must recognize E-Procurement still in
infancy stage - Focus on enablement, not control
- Early implementers and quick wins
8Planning for Re-engineering
- Solid project management is key
- Clarify the opportunity
- Problem with current situation
- How and for whom will things be better
- Performance criteria for deliverables
- Scope (boundaries and limits on the project)
- Constraints (cost, timeframe, required quality)
- Clear roles (sponsor, project manager, authority
to make decisions)
9Justifying the Investment
- Spend analysis (sample of data)
- Process analysis and mapping
- Cost of current state
- Determine future state
- Benchmark with Best Practices
- Estimate return on investment
10Spend Analysis
Spend analysis involves looking at spend data in
different ways to help identify where improvement
opportunities lie
Analysed by
11Mapping Procurement Process for Each Method of
Purchase
- Identify procurement processes
- Map workflow for each process
- Identify re-engineering opportunities
- Inefficient processes
- Redundant processes
- Obsolete processes
- Flag policies and procedures to be updated or
eliminated
12Example of Process Map
13Current State Cost for Baseline
- Average fully-loaded cost per transaction for
each type of procurement - Fixed costs (e.g., building occupancy, IT capital
depreciation) - Variable costs (e.g., procurement service fees
salaries of procurement, line management and
accounts payable staff)
14Future State Opportunities
- Identify desired state for streamlined
procurement process - Process simplification
- Appropriate delegation of authorities
- Avoid rework
- Eliminate duplicate data entry
- Technology as enabler
- Provide tool sets
- Streamline work processes
15Benchmark with Best Practices
- Business Processes
- Unit Costs
- Use comparable organizations, public sector where
available - With emphasis on comparability
16Justifying the Investment Estimate ROI
- Cost of E-procurement enablement
- Cost to reengineer procurement processes
- Policy simplification
- Streamline business processes
- Human Resource retraining, displacement
- Project savings after IT and process
reengineering - Savings for each type of procurement process
17Considerations for Selecting E-Procurement
Solution
- Procurement functionality supports
- Innovative procurement methods (e.g., reverse
auctions) - Electronic order processing
- Work flow
- Business rules capability
- Reporting
- Event notification
- Payment card usage
- Tax calculation modules
18Considerations for Selection
- Catalogue functionality supports
- Products and services
- Internal customized catalogues
- Supplier managed catalogues
- Supplier product configurators
- Catalogue aggregators
19Considerations for Selection
- Vendors customer base
- Targets large to mid-size customers
- Targets government sector
- Significant number of customers
- Canadian presence
- Significant market presence
- Underlying technology solution
- Mainstream or home grown
- Customer access to code
20Considerations for Selection
- ERP integration
- Supports users ERP(s)
- User interface
- Web based
- GUI based
- Vendor product support
- Support provided during normal business hours in
applicable time zone, with no surcharges
21Considerations for Selection
- Technology supported
- Platform includes Unix
- Database includes Oracle
- Supplier connectivity standards
- Support includes XML, OBI, EDI
- Standalone or ASP
- Includes a stand alone version of the system
22Considerations for Selection
- Vendors financial strength
- Public or private ownership
- Financial strength rating by independent body
- Industry analyst ranking
- Rating in E-procurement competitive environment
- Costing Model
- One time licence fees/transaction fee
- Overall cost of solution
23The British Columbia Experience
- Current State
- Metrics for Affected Procurement
- Initiatives Underway
- Common Infrastructure
- BC Bid Electronic Sourcing System
- Procure to Pay
24The British Columbia Experience
- Current State
- BC Bid system
- Linked to Merx
- Shopping carts, internal catalogues, electronic
charge back to ministries (distribution centres,
publication sales)
25Metrics for BC Procurement
- Over 2 billion in spend by government
ministries, over 8 billion public sector - Suppliers to BC Government
- 38,422 suppliers
- Top 20 suppliers provide 585 million
- Top 40 suppliers provide 742 million
26Metrics
- 260 million purchases on Standing Offer
Agreements - 187,000 transactions for 51 million using
procurement card - Average 275 per transaction
27Shift in Focus
28British Columbia Initiatives
- Initiatives underway
- Electronic Service Infrastructure
- Enterprise Portal
- Integration broker
- BC Electronic Identification
- New BC Bid system
- Procure to Pay
29BC Initiatives
- Portal project
- To have a single gateway for public, suppliers
and government employees - Build on strength of common look and feel
- Security
- Authentication
- Integration Broker
- To implement a single standard for interfacing
and transferring data between systems
30RELATIONSHIP - BC Bid Procure To Pay
Budget
Audit
Report
Pay
Procurement Management
Order
Requisition
Procure To Pay (Requisition to Accounts Payable)
Contract
Source
BC Bid (Sourcing to Award)
Strategy
31BC Bid Electronic Sourcing System
- To provide fair and open access to ministries
and funded public bodies bid opportunities - To provide a one-stop location for all BC public
sector bid opportunities - To enable suppliers to provide on-line quotes
- To provide templates for preparing solicitations
and subsequent amendments
32BC Bid System
- To enable public sector buyers to evaluate quotes
and issue awards - To permit push of bid opportunities to
registered suppliers - To interface with governments Oracle Financials,
SAP and ERPs of participating public sector
bodies - To provide comprehensive management reporting for
procurement decision-making
33BC Bid System
- Anticipated benefits of BC Bid System
- Savings in procurement process and cost of goods,
services and construction - Increase access and reduce costs for suppliers
- Support implementation of procurement shared
service agency - Enable central strategic procurement
- Enable decentralized purchasing at ministry level
and by funded public bodies
34BC Bid System
Public Bodies
Suppliers
Enterprise Portal
Interface to ERPs
Security/ Authentication layer
Hyperlink
Oracle
Catalogues
SAP
Other ERPs
Ministries
35BC Bid Functions
- Workflow
- Requisition creation
- Solicitation creation (templates)
- Solicitation posting
- Bid submission
- Bid receiving
- Award creation
- Online/ offline award
- Management reporting
- Hyperlink to existing catalogues
- Security
- Evaluation tool sets
- SAP Oracle interface
- Supplier file interface
Public Bodies
BC Bid System
Suppliers
Ministries
SAP
Oracle
Hyperlink
Catalogues
36BC Bid System
- BC Bid System project next steps
- Request for Proposal process completed
- Negotiating contract with successful supplier
- Target implementation June 2002
37Procure to Pay
- Result of cross-government financial benchmarking
study - Accounts Payable costs higher than best practice
benchmarks - Concluded significant savings required
reengineering of end-to-end process - From purchase order to payment of suppliers
- Initial focus is BC government ministries
38Procure to Pay
- Identified and mapped processes for 22 different
types of procurement - Sampled 9 ministries that represent 80 of total
government spend
39Procure to Pay Opportunities
- Changes to government-wide policy and business
procedures - Procurement process improvement, even without IT
changes - Technology to improve procurement provide data
for strategic sourcing - Skill development to ensure sound procurement
practices
40Procure to Pay Opportunities
- Projected process savings of 22 million over 5
years - 25 to 30 reduction for Standing Offer Agreements
- 30 to 40 reduction for Pcard process
(reconciliation, reporting) - Reduction of 98 minutes staff time per
transaction for general contracts - Reduction of 325 minutes staff time per
transaction for complex contracts
41Redesigning Public Procurement
- Technology enablement can
- Streamline to reduce process costs
- Enhance strategic procurement activities to
reduce cost of goods, services and construction
42Redesigning Public Procurement
- Determining potential ROI requires
- Analysis of current state (spend, procurement and
payment processes) - Agreement on future state (objectives to be met,
business model) - Estimate cost of change
- Benchmark with Best Practices
- Recognize it is a moving target
43Redesigning Public Procurement
Where are they? I am their leader
44Appendix A
- Procure to Pay Best Practices
- Developed by the British Columbia Governments
Procure to Pay Working Group
45Procure to Pay Best Practices
- Manage Suppliers
- Structure purchasing organizations to facilitate
supplier management and strategic sourcing - establish cross-functional teams, i.e.
specialists from areas such as purchasing,
operations, and customer service combine their
expertise to select and manage suppliers - negotiate volume discounts with suppliers and
pass along favourable pricing, terms, and
conditions to customers
46Manage Suppliers
- Consolidate the supply base
- target specific supply categories one at a time,
and optimize the size of the supply base by
drawing only on suppliers that meet standards for
quality, price, delivery, service, and business
integrity - establish closer ties with suppliers that best
meet needs, to foster closer co-operation between
government and its suppliers - Manage the supplier selection process
- carefully identify and document the requirements,
and communicate them fully to all potential
suppliers
47Manage Suppliers
- Partner with suppliers
- share information freely with suppliers regarding
governments objectives and priorities - evaluate suppliers performance by regularly
tracking key metrics - work with suppliers to achieve cost savings, e.g.
commit to long-term agreements, in exchange for
discounts, favourable credit terms and other
benefits, and share the savings with suppliers
when they identify cost reductions
48Manage Suppliers
- Partner with suppliers (contd)
- allow self-service web-based access for standard
supplier inquiries and supplier registry - develop strategic alliances with key suppliers
- facilitate supplier development, including
proactive communication of business opportunities
to suppliers
49Purchase Goods and Services
- Align purchasing strategy with overall corporate
strategy - include broad goals for the purchasing function
in governments overall strategic plans - purchasing managers then define the steps
required to achieve these goals, and establish
specific performance measures
50Purchase Goods and Services
- Use performance measures and controls
- quantifiable measures by bench-marking against
comparable private and public sector leaders - controlling costs
- establishing and maintaining supplier
relationships - satisfying key stakeholders (e.g. end users,
policy makers) and - making continuous operating improvements
- incentives that reward staff for meeting
performance targets
51Purchase Goods and Services
- Establish cross-functional linkages
- involve purchasing in the strategic stage of the
procure-to-pay process to help set standards for
goods and services, and address product
standardization and supplier selection - Develop / apply supplier performance ratings
- establish and rank criteria like quality,
delivery reliability, price, service based on
strategic importance of the commodity
52Purchase Goods and Services
- Ensure that personnel involved in the
procure-to-pay process are fully trained and
knowledgeable - plan for thorough training of staff and managers,
including end-users - communicate the purchasing strategy to all areas
of government
53Purchase Goods and Services
- Implement integrated information system
- implement integrated on-line procure-to-pay
solution that extends across all of government
and to suppliers - seamless flow of data to increase efficiencies,
and ensure better tracking and reporting of
information - data captured once at the start of the process
- use of self-service purchase requisition system
and centrally managed web-based catalogues
54Purchase Goods and Services
- Promote ethical supplier relationships
- create a policy that explicitly defines
governments standards for ethics in purchasing - train employees and suppliers so that the policy
is fully understood - boost employee professionalism
- perform regular audits of purchasing records for
compliance
55Purchase Goods and Services
- Reduce costs for small orders / routine
purchasing transactions - rationalize use of procurement cards
- procurement card purchases replaced with
e-commerce purchasing where possible - designate a group of approved vendors and allow
employees to make certain purchases directly - rationalize employee spending authorization limits
56Accounts Payable
- Manage payment dates and terms
- eliminate late fees and interest charges with
on-time payments - pay early to take advantage of prompt-payment
discounts
57Accounts Payable
- Streamline and automate processes
- avoid having to key data into the system (e.g.
receive invoices via EDI) - automate recurring payments, via direct debits by
the supplier - pay via EFT to save money on paper cheques
- eliminate invoices as the driver for payments,
carefully control the purchasing and receiving
processes, and pay by Electronic Receipt
Settlement (ERS) - store purchasing and financial records
electronically to facilitate retrieval/sorting
and eliminate filing furniture
58Accounts Payable
- Protect against fraud and over payments
- define and implement appropriate controls across
all functions of government - adopt code of ethics
- train employees in controls for fraud prevention
- segregate job responsibilities in purchasing and
receiving, and finance and inspection where
applicable
59Accounts Payable
- Establish controls appropriate to risk and value
- create optimal layers of approvals and audits,
i.e. match the level and number of controls to
the risk and value of the transactions, meaning
stricter audits and approvals on high value
transactions than on low-value ones - eliminate invoice approvals, relying instead on
approved POs and receipts - rationalize payment approval thresholds
60Accounts Payable
- Integrate AP with procurement function
- implement shared services to operate with fewer
people and fewer electronic transactions - increase specialization
61Accounts Payable
- Link AP and AR systems
- build interfaces between the e-billing and
e-payment systems - customise the integrated AP and AR systems to
flexible disbursements and ensure smooth cash
flow
62Appendix B
- Example of map and identified tasks for Master
Standing Offer purchases
63Example of Process Map
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