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Presentation to Shared Services Canada (SSC) IT Information Round-table(ITIR) Procurement Benchmarks Advisory Committee By CABiNET 19 April 2013 Please note, the following information was provided and presented by CABiNET. Introduction • CABiNET represents Small and Medium sized Enterprises (SMEs) in the IT professional services sector. • Membership is primarily government professional services suppliers. • Historically over 70% of GOC NCR IT Professional Services have been met by SME’s in a fully transparent and competitive manner. • Members have a significant involvement and knowledge of Federal government IT operations. -2- Introduction continued • The E-mail consolidation procurement model raises concerns as it would prevent SME’s from participating. • That procurement model would only be open to large multi-national companies, even though SME’s have a demonstrated ability to provide equivalent services. • The approach should change if you want to meet the stated Shared Services objective which is to be inclusive. -3- Importance of SME’s The importance of SME’s has been acknowledged by Parliament and all political parties. • • • The success of SME’s affects the well-being of the Canadian economy and society as engines of job creation, economic growth and innovation. SME’s account for 45% of the GDP, much of the economy’s growth, 60% of all jobs in the economy, and 75% of net employment growth. SME’s are an integral part of our country’s economic fabric and are important to Federal Government procurement – from stationery stores in every Canadian town, to the high technology companies centered in many Canadian cities. http://www.tpsgc-pwgsc.gc.ca/app-acq/pme-sme/importance-eng.html -4- SME Value Proposition • Many years of experience in federal government procurement • SME’s have more experience in both the departments being supported and Shared Services Canada (SSC) • Most of the IT professional services contract work currently being done is by SME’s • Cost effectiveness of services provided as demonstrated by the percentage of competitive procurements won • Ours is a proven collaborative model of working with Government employees, resulting in the Government maintaining service delivery control versus a vendor focus on maintaining profit margins. -5- How Things Actually Work Issues must be addressed within the RFP documents and process because: • Once awarded, vehicles are never cancelled • “Off ramps” are not meaningful – They are never taken • Once in place, all funds in a contract will be spent, EVEN if not for the original purpose • Rate structures are frequently not enforced with services migrating to “rate that fits” rather than proper categories. -6- Use Proven Best Practices • Plan projects as chewable chunks • Don’t bundle hardware, software, telecom services with professional services • Clustering approach similar to that used in SBIPS ‘domains of expertise’, fosters ‘best in breed’ across the various areas • Award to multiple suppliers per domain provides for more ongoing competitive pricing • Government maintains control of spending -7- Concerns with Outcome-based Procurement “One throat to choke” is not meaningful – because vendors know contract will never be cancelled • Impossible to write all requirements up front. Gives control to the vendors making cost effective change management difficult • Secure Channel is a perfect example, $100M / year for 25M transactions / year • The Auditor General has pointed out that most outcome based procurements have experienced significant cost overruns and failed to meet expectations -8- Fair and Open Procurement Examples • It’s essential to do upfront planning for your procurement approach • Use TBIPS to put in place long-term supply arrangements (3-5 years) which allow fast turn-around on specific requirements, which would eliminate recurring procurement overhead, while ensuring ongoing competition • Could incorporate function-based contracting similar to proposed approach to telecom services (Option 4) • Successful examples include: – Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) – Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) – Citizenship & Immigration Canada (CIC) -9- What CABiNET Wants • Allow Supply Arrangement holders to use subcontractor references to meet corporate requirements • Enforce reasonable rate structures within proposals (eg: CCRA 2003 versus CRA 2010) • Type and size of project references should be relevant and related to the lines of business and skills being procured • Discourage ‘off-shoring’ of Canadian jobs - 10 - Next Steps