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Overview Of Procurement Process

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Title: Overview Of Procurement Process


1
Overview Of Procurement Process
  • Bill Hatchl
  • Procurement Manager
  • January 2005
  • http//genesis.gsfc.nasa.gov/210/con210m.htm

Procurement 101
2
Evaluation
  • Is the information in this presentation useful to
    you?
  • What topics were not covered that you need to
    know about, or were not covered enough?
  • What additional information on those topics would
    you like to learn about?
  • What topics were covered that you didnt need to
    know about, or were covered too much?
  • Other comments?

3
Who Does Code 210.M Procurement Support?
  • AETD (Code 500), IVV (Code 180), ATO (Code 408),
    Space Communications (Code 450) and OSSMA (Code
    300)
  • Simplified acquisitions (lt100k)
  • Larger dollar contracts, including competitive
    and sole-source
  • Commercial acquisitions
  • RD
  • Supplies
  • Services
  • SBIR/STTRs
  • NRAs
  • Interagency agreements (with other Federal
    government agencies only)
  • Requests for information/partnership opportunity
    documents

4
Federal Government Procurement
  • Where the seller gets to sue the buyer (thats
    us) because the seller disagrees with the buyers
    purchase decision
  • Where everything is supposed to be competed, even
    when you already know of a very, very good source
  • Where its deliberately made difficult to buy
    from only one company

5
The Procurement Process(Dictated by statute and
regulation)
  • Synopsize requirement (16 to 30 calendar days)
  • Issue solicitation (Request for Proposal, Request
    for Offer, Request for Quote) (30 to 60 days)
  • Proposal receipt (30 to 60 days)
  • Evaluation (cost, business, technical) (45 to 90
    days)
  • Contract award, including negotiations (30 to 60
    days)
  • Contract administration
  • Contract closeout

6
Typical Contract Award Lead Times
  • Commercial acquisitions
  • Competitive (90205 days)
  • Noncompetitive (98237 days)
  • Noncommercial acquisitions
  • Competitive (150325 days)
  • Noncompetitive (160340 days)
  • Simplified acquisitions (27 days)

7
Contracting Methods
  • Simplified acquisitions (not more than 100K)
  • Usually takes 30 days to award
  • Small contract acquisitions (not more than
    10M)
  • Usually takes 4 to 6 months to award
  • Large contract acquisitions (more than 10M)
  • Usually takes 4 to 12 months to award
  • Request for Information/Partnership Opportunity
    Document
  • _Usually takes 60 days to complete
  • Above timelines are approximate due to large,
    though shrinking, backlog of procurements

8
Contracting Types(Selected to reflect the
burden of the risk of cost performance.)
  • Fixed-price contracts
  • Commercial and noncommercial clear requirements
  • Cost-reimbursement contracts
  • Noncommercial and vague requirements
  • Incentive contracts
  • Noncommercial and improved performance
  • Indefinite-delivery contracts
  • Commercial, noncommercial and indefinite
    requirements
  • Time-and-materials and labor-hour contracts
  • Commercial and noncommercial and vague
    requirements
  • Least favored contract type
  • Letter contracts
  • Immediate performance required

9
Fixed Price Contracts
  • Firm fixed price, fixed price with economic price
    adjustment, fixed price incentive fee, fixed
    price award fee
  • Firm fixed price
  • Fixes price we pay if our specifications are
    very, very clear
  • Ambiguous specifications are interpreted against
    us
  • We may have to pay that fixed price for something
    that is less than you need and less than what we
    thought we were ordering

10
Cost Reimbursement Contracts
  • Cost Plus No Fee, Cost Plus Fixed Fee, Cost Plus
    Incentive Fee, Cost Plus Award Fee
  • Contractor promises its best efforts and we
    promise to pay whatever the Contractor spends
  • Initial cost is only an estimate that establishes
    a cost ceiling that the contractor cannot exceed
    without our agreement

11
Justification for Other Than Full and Open
Competition (JOFOC-sole source)
  • Required for sole source and limited competitions
  • Must demonstrate that the source (or limited
    sources) is the only entity in the world that can
    meet your minimum requirement
  • Must explain your requirement and why it is the
    minimum required
  • Competition cannot be avoided because we failed
    to begin the procurement process early enough
  • Such justifications must be posted on the
    worldwide web for 15 days

12
Waiver of Sole Source Web Postings
  • Based on unusual and compelling urgency
  • Intended to be used rarely for true emergencies
  • Agency will be seriously harmed (financial,
    technical, or other substantial injury) if
    competitive process is used
  • Justification must include details, not just
    conclusions
  • Show how we didnt dawdle in determining our
    requirements and starting the procurement process
  • Show the precise and serious harm that will be
    suffered
  • Provide the dates and timelines that prevent
    taking the time needed for the competitive process

13
Competition Types
  • Lowest price/cost responsive bid
  • Winner is the lowest price bid that meets our
    minimum requirements
  • Best value responsive bid
  • Winner is the bid with the best value,
    considering technical merit, cost/price, and past
    performance
  • Do not underestimate past performance as this
    factor can eliminate companies that have not
    successfully completed similar work
  • Requires fair evaluation criteria to be developed
    in advance, included in our solicitation, and
    strictly used to evaluate the bids received

14
Small Business Set-asides
  • Each competition must be considered for
    limitation to small businesses only
  • Two qualified small businesses are sufficient to
    set aside a competition for small businesses only
  • Requires us both to conduct market research to
    determine if there are two small businesses
  • Default is to post your requirement on the web
    and ask small businesses to tell us their
    qualifications

15
Performance Work Statement
  • Should define required outcomes instead of design
    specifications
  • What result we need versus how to do it
  • More is better than less
  • Insure that terminology is clear and has a
    commonly accepted meaning (term of art) in the
    wider technical community
  • Ambiguities are construed against the drafter (i.
    e., us)

16
Technical Evaluation
  • Required at some level of detail for every
    contract award (more as the dollar value of the
    award increases)
  • Essential requirements for a complete technical
    evaluation
  • Recommends, explains, and justifies adjustments
    when required to insure product/service will
    satisfy your requirement
  • Analyzes labor hours, categories, and mix of
    categories
  • Analyzes other direct costs (materials,
    subcontracts, travel, etc.)
  • All the above applies equally to subcontractor
    costs
  • Approved by your branch manager

17
Negotiation(A fair and reasonable price)
  • Remember that you have a role to help negotiate a
    fair price for what you need
  • Fact-finding
  • Technical, resources, and contract personnel
  • Used to get our questions answered during our
    evaluation
  • Avoid transfusion and leveling
  • Negotiations
  • Same team members working towards a fair price

18
Task Orders
  • Performance work statement
  • Solicitation, evaluation, and negotiation of
    contractor proposal
  • Award of negotiated task order
  • Process can be completed in 15 days
  • Can issue a task order before solicitation is
    issued
  • Task Order Management System (TOMS) automates
    entire process

19
When Do You Need Procurement?
  • When you need some thing or some person that you
    dont already have.
  • If you do not have it, my office is probably
    going to have to buy it for you.
  • Come early because we will need a lot of time to
    get it
  • Always remember that government procurement is
    neither easy or quick

20
What Does Code 210.M Procurement Do?
  • Purpose
  • Provide full service procurement
  • support
  • Plan acquisitions
  • Award contracts, purchase orders, and interagency
    agreements
  • Administer contracts, etc.
  • Resolve contract problems (performance, cost,
    other)
  • Close out physically complete contracts, etc.

21
Contacts in Code 210.M
Procurement Manager
Bill Hatchl, x6843
Contracting Officers/Contract Specialists
  • Diane Scheuerman, x4208
  • Eric Newman, x4240
  • Cathy Pierson, x5257
  • Darlene Dorsey, x4242
  • Jennifer Awkard, x6843
  • Carol Barton, x4239
  • Dave Vance, x2802
  • Mayra Nieves-Torres, x0422
  • Chuck Greene, x3721 (6/W125)
  • Brett Gillard, x2142
  • Nipa Shah, x1892
  • Gerry Humphrey, x9083
  • Delma Moore, 304-367-8491 (IVV/WVa)

We are located in Building 11, Room S215
22
Contacts in Code 210.M
  • Contract Administrator

Vacant
Simplified Acquisition Specialists
Cynthia White, x3596 (Team Leader) Sandra
Harrell, x3723 (Codes 540-544 and cell phones)
Marolyn Cross, x4782 (Code 560 and
pagers) Talaya Brooks, x6937 (Codes
552-556) Agnes Smith, x9129 (Codes 180, 300,
408, 450-454, and 500-504) (6/W125) Raymond
Jones, x3722 (Codes 550-551, and 590) Yolanda
Williams, x0689 (Codes 545-549 and 580) Rhonda
Roebuck, x8688
23
How Can We Make the Process More Efficient?
  • Planning
  • As early as possible--
  • discuss requirements with procurement
  • mutually develop procurement strategy and
    schedule
  • Prepare Complete Documentation
  • Include all necessary documents with PR
  • If sole source, ensure well-written JOFOC

Try as we may, we cannot work miracles!
24
Dos and Donts
  • Do--
  • Meet with procurement early-on to discuss your
    requirements
  • Communicate often and regularly
  • Seek advice and assistance
  • Ask questions if you dont understand how to put
    together a required document (i.e., JOFOC, SOW,
    evaluation criteria, etc.)
  • Prepare and submit all required documentation
    promptly

25
Dos and Donts
  • Dont--
  • tell the contractor to start work before contract
    award
  • agree to any special terms and conditions of
    contracting without consulting with procurement
    first
  • admit fault or liability on the part of the
    Govt. without first discussing the situation
    with procurement

26
Simplified Acquisitions
  • Purchases 100,000 or less must be set-aside
    totally for small businesses
  • There are exceptions
  • GSA supply schedules
  • Lack of 1 or more small business sources
  • Requires comprehensive market research to support
    this conclusion
  • Sources sought web posting if market research
    inadequate, delaying the purchase
  • Sole source

27
Simplified Acquisitions
  • Simplified acquisitions systemic problems
  • AMS reporting increased
  • Beginnings of PR backlog
  • Increases effort and time to award POs
  • IFM was new and had to be learned
  • IFM is not as good as SPS
  • No linked DGS, requiring us to generate POs from
    scratch
  • No email notifications to requisitioners
  • No workable interim status system
  • Close down periods require hand-entering of PRs
    and POs
  • Harder to use, not as complete as SPS (not a
    purchasing system, IFM purchasing module expected
    in 2006 or 2007)
  • Few, if any, checks to insure that PR initiators
    provide us with complete and accurate info,
    requiring us to track it down and enter it into
    the IFM system

28
Simplified Acquisitions
  • Purchase Requisition Improvements
  • Need to insure PRs entered into IFM include all
    necessary information
  • Choosing correct P Group for non-simplified
    acquisition PRs
  • Choosing the correct release strategy
  • Header text tab has all essential info
  • Requisitioner, Initiator, and Resources Analyst
    and their organization code(s)
  • Suggested sources, including points of contact
    and phone numbers
  • Item text
  • PLIs include all relevant part numbers, etc.
  • Item details
  • Including line item description details in Item
    text tab or in an attachment
  • Including all the info in the delivery address
    tab
  • Remember to track PR progress through IFM release
    strategy, especially when PR rejected or hung up
    in release cycle
  • Reviewing initiator or branch head in-box for
    rejected PRs

29
Simplified Acquisitions
  • Purchase Requisition Improvements (contd.)
  • Use electronic attachments feature in IFM to
    include statements of work, sole source
    justifications, etc.
  • De-commit funds after PO issued for lesser dollar
    amounts
  • Sole source requires 3 elements
  • Why what you want is NASAs minimum requirement
  • Why your company is the only one that can satisfy
    that minimum requirement
  • Demonstrate that you adequately planned this
    procurement
  • Remember that you can initiate a purchase
    requisition with 0 you dont have to wait for
    the cash to get to Goddard and AETD

30
  • Back Up Charts

31
What Does Procurement Do?
  • Pre-award Activity
  • Acquisition planning
  • contract vehicle (simplified acquisition
    mid-range commercial, etc.)
  • contract type (cost-reimbursement, fixed price,
    IDIQ)
  • documentation--review and help prepare--
  • sole-source justification
  • statement of work
  • specification
  • Procurement Request (PR)
  • in-house cost estimate
  • evaluation criteria

32
What Does Procurement Do?
  • Solicitation Process
  • Sole-source and competitive
  • prepare solicitation document (RFO, RFP, RFQ)
  • oversee proposal evaluations
  • Award Contracts
  • negotiate
  • prepare contract file documentation
  • review and approval process
  • issue signed contract document

33
What Does Procurement Do
  • Contract Administration
  • Administer contracts/purchase orders after award
    (funding, contract changes, etc.)
  • Ensure that contractor adheres to terms and
    conditions
  • Resolve cost and performance problems
  • Invoice payment process

34
Why Does It Take So Long??
  • Standard Leadtimes
  • based on type of type of procurement action
  • Competitive vs. noncompetitive
  • Commercial vs. noncommercial
  • Dollar amount of requirement (simplified
    acquisition vs. mid-range vs. SEB)
  • Interagency agreement
  • SBIR/STTRs

35
Why Does It Take So Long
  • Review of PR package for completeness
  • PR completed properly (all required signatures,
    routed through Accounting and AMS)?
  • Sole-source (JOFOC), if necessary?
  • If competitive, evaluation criteria?
  • Statement of Work complete and in PBC format?
  • Specification?
  • Name, address, and telephone number of contractor
    if sole-source?

36
Why Does It Take So Long??
  • Synopsizing
  • All procurements over 25k
  • FAR states that they you must allow 15 days
  • Only extreme situations permit waiver from this
    requirement
  • Solicitation Process
  • Govt requests a proposal
  • Contractor(s) submits proposal(s)

37
Why Does It Take So Long
  • Review of Proposal
  • technical
  • cost
  • business
  • Contract Award
  • Govt prepares contract for contractor signature
  • After signature by contractor, Govt countersigns
    and the contract is formally awarded

38
REMEMBER--
  • Poor
  • planning doesnt constitute
  • a justification for a
  • sole source!
  • Cannot overemphasize the importance of early
    planning!

39
Reminders
  • Despite some perceptions and beliefs to the
    contrary, we are here to help!!
  • Call anyone in the office at any time if you have
    any questions whatsoever. There is no such thing
    as a dumb question!
  • You are not expected to know all the ins and
    outs of the procurement process thats what
    were here for.

40
Success Starts With ? A Team Effort ?
  • Technical and procurement personnel must work
    together as a team
  • Each has a specific area of expertise
  • Both are necessary to successfully procure the
    supplies and services needed to support the
    mission of AETD and Goddard

41
We Can Make the Process More Efficient and
Effective!
  • ? Working together as a technical and business
    team
  • ? Understanding the process
  • ? Initiating requirements sufficiently in
    advance
  • ? Ensuring complete procurement packages

42
A Final Note...
  • Involve procurement early on in the planning
    process
  • Always remember procurement in your planning
    process
  • Early procurement planning is of paramount
    importance
  • ...In other words, dont forget to include
    procurement when planning your programs and
    projects!!
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