Managing Procurement Agreements: A Case Study For The PMP® Certification Course
Managing Procurement Agreements: A Case Study For The PMP® Certification Course
Managing Procurement Agreements: A Case Study For The PMP® Certification Course
AGREEMENTS
A case study for the PMP® Certification Course.
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Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................................3
Challenges .....................................................................................................................................................3
Solution .........................................................................................................................................................4
Approach.......................................................................................................................................................6
Final Outcome...............................................................................................................................................6
Critical Success Factors .................................................................................................................................7
Lessons Learned............................................................................................................................................7
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Introduction
The specificity of the contracts that customers sign before receiving a service
depends on service deliverables and targets. The original scope of work often
changes during the planning process and sometimes later, depending on the level
of investigation and discussion held during the initial stages.
Challenges
Many customers of the construction company have grown dissatisfied with the
overall service over the past year. The service provider believes it is doing a good
job and cannot understand where the customers’ concerns are coming from.
Conversations between the customer service manager and the customers seem
to indicate that customers’ expectations are not fully taken into account during
the discovery and planning process of remodeling jobs. As a result, more time is
spent on working through conflicts and reaching a decision satisfactory to the
customer.
Customers also complain about the construction company’s use of third parties;
they report inconsistencies in turnaround time when dealing with a third party
and confusion over who should be doing what. The third parties often ask the
customer to complete tasks that the customer believes the construction company
is responsible for.
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Overall, all the issues stem from the fact that the construction company does not
have a well-defined procurement statement of work, quality
expectations/metrics, and a service level agreement in place with its
suppliers/third party providers. Furthermore, the contracts that are in place
between the construction company and the third-party partners are not in
alignment with customer expectations.
Solution
First, the construction company must do what it can to ensure that customer
requirements are fully captured. This is handled in the planning phase. The
strength of the planning process can drive the success of the project delivery.
Here are the key actions the construction company must take during the planning
process.
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• Develop a process for risk management, including risk identification,
analysis, and response planning
• Determine what needs to be purchased, how procurement will be
managed, and how contracts will be developed
• Determine how to execute and control the project
• Document the project management plan
• Handle updates coming out of change requests
Here are the key tasks that should be executed to garner customer sign-off at the
end of the project.
Actions taken
● Communicate progress
● Measure project performance against the baseline
● Determine variances and take appropriate action
● Recommend changes and corrective and preventive action
● Facilitate conflict resolution
● Identify root causes of problems
● Obtain formal acceptance for the deliverables
● Administer contracts with sellers
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● Control changes
● Conduct status review meetings, etc.
Rather than operating as an independent, unrelated third party, each supplier will
see itself as an important piece of the puzzle of achieving customer satisfaction.
Approach
Final Outcome
With customers removed from the decision making and accountability process
and the construction company and its third-party partners on the same page
about what specific targets must be met, customers will be more satisfied with
the overall remodeling experience. Not only will they feel that the quality of
service has increased, but they will also receive more frequent communication
and will be able to see that different teams within the construction company are
working together much more effectively in support of their services.
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When engaging with third-party suppliers, customers will have a more consistent
experience. Rather than experiencing confusion and frustration when dealing
with a supplier, customers will appreciate that each supplier is closely aligned
with the construction company and is fully aware of what roles, responsibilities,
and targets it must keep in mind when delivering service.
Overall, the customers will feel that they know exactly what they’ve agreed to when
it comes to service-level targets and that their construction company is consistently
working to meet those targets.
Lessons Learned
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customers. This stems from the likelihood that the company and its third-party
partners are not aligned with the targets that are important to the customer. It is
also common for internal teams to not work effectively together and for third
parties to be unaware of what customer targets are important to the customer.
Based on the Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) ―
Sixth Edition.
PMP, PMI, and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc.
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