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Home Page > Business > Procurement > Rules and Regulations > Critical Success Factors For Specifications

Guidance for officers and members

 

Critical success factors for specifications 

 

Do not over - or under-specify your requirements. The results will be expensive. Reflect your needs, not your wants. State your required outputs/outcomes but allow suppliers to suggest how to provide these. Time taken to produce the specification will be rewarded. Involve stakeholders in developing and signing-off the specification. Be alert as to how the specification is allocating risks. The time and effort applied to developing a specification should be in keeping with the risks and complexities attached to the requirement. However, a specification will be helpful for all requirements, even routine procurements as it provides a useful contractual record of what was requested.

 

Involving relevant stakeholders, particularly users, in the development of a specification is essential to ensure it properly reflects their needs. A basic rule for producing a specification is to ensure that it is as output-based as possible - that is, it states the desired output/outcome but does not prescribe how a supplier should meet this. However there are three main types of specification.

 

Functional and performance descriptions of requirements provide an output-based approach. The approach is most effective because it promotes supplier innovation and recognises that in most instances they are best placed to identify the most appropriate solution. Technical

specifications are generally too restrictive, particularly for service provision, and retain the risk of failure with the authority.

 

Other Tender Documentation

 

For all contract requiring tenders, tenderers will be asked to provide method statements setting out, for example, their proposed solution, how they will resource and manage the contract and the supply chain, and how they will bring about continuous improvement and added value and how they will ensure compliance with Health and Safety legislation.

 

Terms and Conditions

 

Generally speaking, the Council uses standard forms terms and conditions of contract, approved by Legal Services which suppliers will be requested to accept with minimal variation prior to award of contract. These set out the basic requirements that will be common to most procurement such as what will happen in the case of a default by a supplier and when and how payments will be made. These are included in all invitations to tender and on order forms where quotations are sought (less than £25k).

 

Such terms and conditions should not however be overly adversarial so that fair and trusting relationships can be developed with suppliers.

Where a large number of replies are expected an early sifting (pre-qualification or supplier assessment) exercise, based on information requested in the advertisement, will help to provide a manageable number to invite to tender. The criteria used at this stage normally concern financial risk and technical capability of the supplier. Criteria should be carefully chosen to avoid unnecessary ruling out at this stage of suppliers who might be suitable to provide the requirements. For contracts being awarded under the procurement regulations (open, restricted and negotiated procedures) there are rules on the information that can be sought to assess the financial risk capacity and capability of suppliers and on the minimum number to be invited to tender or negotiate.

 

Inviting Tenders

 

Once suppliers have been identified as suitable for further consideration, they may be invited to tender. Invitation to tender (ITT) documentation typically comprises four main parts:-

 

• ITT itself, including tendering instructions;

• specification (drafted by client or project owner);

• contract;

• pricing schedule;

 

All of the above, with the exception of the Specification, will be prepared by the Procurement Department.

 

Tendering Instructions: This section provides advice on the timescales and administration of the procurement process and conditions for tendering.

 

Developing the Specification

 

The specification provides potential suppliers with a statement of the authority’s requirements and will form an important part of any contract with the supplier. It will also provide the information on which suppliers will base their pricing and resource structure and therefore must be comprehensive and clear. The importance of getting the specification right should not be underestimated.