The Government Manager's Guide to Source Selection: GMEL series
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About this ebook
Charles D. Solloway Jr.
Charles D. Solloway, Jr., CPCM, has more than 40 years of acquisition experience in the government and private sector. As a civilian employee of the U. S. Army, he held positions as buyer, contract specialist, contract negotiator, procurement analyst, contracting officer, and director of contracting. He twice received the U. S. Army’s highest civilian award, the Decoration for Exceptional Civilian Service, for innovations in contracting. He is the author of Source Selection Step by Step and Managing Federal Government Contracts: The Answer Book. He is a Fellow of the National Contract Management Association.
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The Government Manager's Guide to Source Selection - Charles D. Solloway Jr.
INDEX
PREFACE
Although the extent of government reliance on contractors may change over time, it is abundantly clear that the government will always depend on the private sector to provide many goods and services. Quite often government managers must become involved in, or otherwise be affected by, the process used for selecting contractors to supply those goods and services.
Government managers are most effective in the source selection process when they possess a base of knowledge that enables them to influence the process in a positive manner and enables them to judiciously weigh the advice and counsel given to them by other functional area experts.
This book offers government managers the base of source selection knowledge they need. It explains how the source selection process works, it identifies potential impediments, and it guides the manager in making prudent business decisions. And it does so in a logical sequence and without consuming too much of the manager’s one irreplaceable resource—time.
To the extent feasible, source selection events are examined in this book in the order in which they are likely to occur. And the pertinent information is presented in succinct single-topic chapters. This permits a manager to focus on any particular part of the process whenever the need for specific information arises.
A glossary is included as a reference, should managers encounter terms with which they are not familiar.
Knowledge of the source selection process is of critical importance to today’s government manager. Even the most carefully crafted contract cannot repair the adverse mission impact of making a poor source selection.
—Chuck Solloway
Chapter 1
GETTING EVERYONE ON BOARD
Perhaps the most perplexing aspect of the source selection process for a government manager is dealing with the differing perspectives of the various stakeholders. This chapter briefly examines some of these stakeholder issues as well as approaches often used to get everyone on board in formulating a successful source selection strategy.
THE VISION
The Federal Acquisition Regulation (generally known as the FAR) describes a vision of the acquisition system in which everyone works together toward a successful outcome; at the same time, it implements myriad laws and policies that can make that goal challenging for the government manager.
Many of these challenging
FAR requirements and other government acquisition policy mandates can have one or more assigned advocates or proponents within a contracting agency. And each of these advocates is likely to view the source selection process from his or her own unique perspective.
THE STAKEHOLDERS
The primary stakeholders and their likely dominant concerns are as follows:
• The project or program office sponsoring an acquisition is committed to an established budget and program schedule. The overriding concern of this stakeholder is to complete the job, achieving satisfactory or better than satisfactory results, within the budget and time allotted. The project or program office is directly accountable to the head of the agency, and perhaps even higher levels of the federal government, to do so.
• The actual user of the product or service wants a quality product or service delivered on time. What is accomplished is often much more important to this stakeholder than how it is accomplished.
• The contracting officer must balance the priorities of all of the stakeholders and also seek to avoid contractor protests or other matters that may disrupt or abort the acquisition. The contracting officer and the agency contracting organization must consider a number of discrete goals placed on the agency, such as competition in contracting goals, goals to reduce the use of high cost-risk contract types, and various small business utilization goals. Depending on the current leadership in Congress and the executive department, the emphasis given to any particular goal may vary.
In addition to complying with regulations and policies, the contracting officer must comply with precedent established by the opinions of the comptroller general or the federal courts in responding to protests from contractors.
The contracting officer is also expected to perform his or her duties in a manner that is fair to contractors and advantageous to the public.
• The agency small business advisor is focused on achieving agency small business goals and on agency compliance with regulations pertaining to the constantly growing number of socioeconomic programs involving small disadvantaged (minority) businesses, veteran-owned businesses, woman-owned businesses, companies in historically underutilized business zones, American Indian-owned businesses, and more. At the least, this stakeholder will insist during the source selection process on compliance with the laws and policies governing socioeconomic programs. These socioeconomic goals, although worthwhile, can add to both the complexity and the cost of the source selection process.
• Each government agency may establish other special program advocates for various contract reform efforts such as increasing competition, limiting the use of high-risk contract types, maximizing the use of performance-based requirements documents, and other agency or governmentwide initiatives.
• Agency legal counsel seeks to make sure that the agency operates within the law and, in the event of contractor protest or dispute, has a solid, defensible position. Government lawyers tend to practice preventive law and in the main may seem more inclined toward risk avoidance rather than any other aspect of risk management.
• Representatives from various other agency functional areas are also involved in the source selection process. These may include safety, security, quality, or environmental specialists, each with their own set of priorities and concerns.
• Contractors are stakeholders, too. They seek business and the opportunity to earn a profit. They want to be treated fairly when they compete for government contracts.
To the extent that they are permitted do so within law and policy, contractors attempt to influence the decisions of government stakeholders. For example, they may endeavor during the presolicitation stage to impress the program office with their unique capabilities or attempt to influence the program office to favor a particular technical approach. Or they may seek to convince an agency that a socioeconomic set-aside for their particular segment of business is in order.
• The head of the agency expects everyone to work together to achieve all agency goals.
• The source selection authority (SSA) is the individual who chooses one or more of the competing contractors to receive a contract award. The SSA may rely heavily on the advice and expertise of other stakeholders. The SSA may be the contracting officer or any other designated agency official, such as the project manager or even the agency head.
The SSA also must approve any source selection strategy developed by the other stakeholders.
Manager Alert
The need for stakeholders to work together in source selection is not just a business management cliché. Any individual stakeholder can be a showstopper in the effort to reach a timely consensus on how to proceed with an acquisition.
COMING TO CONSENSUS ON AN ACQUISITION STRATEGY
There are two basic methods by which agencies seek to bring stakeholders together to develop a consensus on an acquisition strategy. One is for the program or project office to independently develop a strategy and then begin to pass strategy papers back and forth for agreement or comments from a variety of other stakeholders. This process is known as throwing papers over the wall. This can be a time-consuming and far less than optimal process, where revised papers repeatedly are thrown back and forth over various functional area walls until the concerns of the various stakeholders are satisfied—or until stakeholders either compromise or surrender their positions.
Another strategy-development method is to hold one or more acquisition strategy meetings where all of the government stakeholders are present. Many agencies require such meetings, especially for big-ticket procurements. The program office, together with the contracting officer, proposes a strategy and gains input from the government stakeholders, all of whom get to both voice their concerns and listen to the concerns of other stakeholders. These strategy meetings should include consideration of any planning input previously provided in planning exchanges with interested contractors.
Typically, these strategy groups are able to reach a consensus. When they do not, agencies normally have a mechanism for obtaining a final strategy decision from higher levels within the agency. These higher-level decisions must also comply with law and regulation.
THE PEOPLE AND THE PROCESS
You cannot separate people from the acquisition process. The astute manager recognizes the legitimate concerns of everyone involved in the source selection process and seeks their assistance. A wagon can be pulled faster and farther when everyone pulls in the same direction.
Chapter 2
AN OVERVIEW OF SOURCE SELECTION
As the term implies, source selection denotes the processes by which the government selects a contractor (a source) to furnish goods or services.
SOLE SOURCE VS. COMPETITION
Government acquisition personnel award contracts in one of two ways:
1. They prepare the appropriate justifications, get the required approvals, and award a contract on a noncompetitive basis.
2. They award a contract on the basis of competition.
COMPETITIVE SOURCE SELECTIONS
When award is made on the basis of competition (either full and open competition or limited competition), contractors are normally selected using any one of three selection processes:
1. Award to the responsible, responsive offeror or bidder with the lowest price when only a price has been requested without any other written or oral proposals.
2. Award to the lowest offer among those responsible offerors that, in addition to a price, have submitted a written and/or oral proposal that has been found to be acceptable. This is called the lowest price, technically acceptable or LPTA process.
3. Award to the responsible contractor offering the best value to the government (which may or may not be the lowest price), considering both price/cost factors and those non-price factors that were identified in the government solicitation and addressed in the contractor’s proposal. This is called the trade-off process.
BEST VALUE
Traditionally, the trade-off process was considered to be the only best value
process. However, the FAR, the acquisition bible of the executive agencies, now defines best value as an outcome (rather than a process) that may be achieved by either LPTA or trade-off or some combination of these two processes.
Manager Alert
To avoid possible misunderstanding, the manager is cautioned that, notwithstanding the current FAR definition, many people in the acquisition community still use best value as a synonym for trade-off when they communicate with others within and outside the acquisition community. You will also find that best value is used as a synonym for trade-off in articles published in professional magazines and even in some of the protest opinions issued by the comptroller general or the Court of Federal Claims. This is a longstanding habit that has been hard to break.
FAR SOURCE SELECTION COVERAGE
The coverage of source selection in FAR Part 15 deals only with LPTA or trade-off. It is these source selection processes that will be addressed in this book.
PROCESS EVENTS
Exhibit 2-1 is an overview of the activities that take place during the source selection processes. Figures 2-2 and 2-3 are graphic representations of the processes from identification of the government requirement to the point when the source is selected. These representations may include terms and actions not yet familiar to the reader. If that is the case, the meanings will become clear as the reader proceeds through subsequent chapters.
FIGURE 2-1
Flow Chart for Award Without Discussions
FIGURE 2-2
Flow Chart for Award After Discussions
EXHIBIT 2-1
Normal Sequence of Events in Source Selection
When award is to be made without holding discussions with competing contractors
1. Identification of the requirement.
2. Planning begins; assignment of responsibilities.
3. Market research begins.*
4. Preparation of the acquisition plan (AP) and the source selection plan (SSP).
5. Issuance of draft request for proposals (RFP), if any, and other presolicitation exchanges with contractors.**
6. Issuance of a synopsis of the requirement at www.fedbizopps.gov, the governmentwide point of entry (GPE). This notifies the public that a solicitation is to be issued and sometimes occurs while Step 7 is being accomplished.
7. Preparation of the solicitation. An RFP is used for most source selections other than simplified acquisitions. Simplified acquisitions often are accomplished using a request for quotations.
8. Issuance of the solicitation.
9. Preproposal conference and/or site visit, if any.
10. Receipt of proposals.
11. Evaluation of proposals.
12. Obtaining clarifications from offerors, where appropriate.
13. Selecting the source, documenting the rationale, making the award.***
14. Competitors notified; debriefings offered.
15. Debriefings held.
When discussions are to be held with competing contractors
1. Identification of the requirement.
2. Planning begins; assignment of responsibilities.
3. Market research begins.*
4. Preparation of the AP and the SSP.
5. Issuance of draft RFP, if any, and other presolicitation exchanges with contractors.**
6. Issuance of a synopsis of the requirement at www.fedbizopps.gov, the GPE. This notifies the public that a solicitation is to be issued and often occurs while Step 7 is being accomplished.
7. Preparation of the solicitation. An RFP is used for most source selections other than simplified acquisitions. Simplified acquisitions often are accomplished using a request for quotations.
8. Issuance of the solicitation.
9. Preproposal conference or site visit, if any.
10. Receipt of proposals.
11. Evaluation of proposals.
12. Holding of communications, where appropriate.
13. Competitive range established.
14. Those not placed in range notified. Debriefings offered.
15. Debriefings held at time determined by contracting officer (may be delayed until after award at request of competing contractor or determination of the contracting officer).
16. Holding of discussions with those in the competitive range.
17. Interim proposal revisions if permitted or required.
18. Final proposal revisions requested and received.
19. Reevaluation of proposals.
20. Selecting the source, documenting the rationale, making the award.***
21. Competing contractors notified of award and offered debriefing.
22. Debriefings held.
* Steps 3 through 5 may be concurrent.
** Presolicitation exchange opportunities may be synopsized at the GPE.
*** Advance notifications before award may be given to competing offerors in the case of set-asides for certain socioeconomic programs.
Chapter 3
LOWEST PRICE, TECHNICALLY ACCEPTABLE VS. TRADE-OFF
Both lowest price, technically acceptable (LPTA) and trade-off source selections require the consideration of at least one other