Details

Programme Procurement in Construction


Programme Procurement in Construction

Learning from London 2012
1. Aufl.

von: John Mead, Stephen Gruneberg

58,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 25.02.2013
ISBN/EAN: 9781118597477
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 240

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Beschreibungen

<p>"This book ... adds to the impressive 'legacy' of learning which is still emerging from the successful delivery of the London 2012 construction programme. The authors combine the reforming zeal of a champion for change, who was there every step of the way, with academic rigour, and the result is delivered with impressive passion and commitment to the topic … All spenders and suppliers need to read this, to understand how conventional understandings of procurement fall so dramatically short when applied to high value-high risk acquisitions, which invariably is what large construction projects represent."<br />—<b>Don Ward, Chief Executive, Constructing Excellence, UK</b></p> <p>Successful construction is often attributed to one or more aspects of the delivery process from good planning, design and clever engineering to efficient project management and quality construction. Before any of these disciplines can begin, they all require some form of procurement to select the team or supply chain to meet a client’s or a project’s specific requirements. The concept of PSE - Purchase and Supplier Engineering - originated in the procurement of the construction and infrastructure required to stage the 30<sup>th</sup> Olympiad in London during 2012.  At the time of writing PSE has successfully delivered almost £25bn of public procurement meeting client and project requirements and without legal challenge.</p> <p>The construction of the venues and infrastructure needed to stage London 2012 was such a resounding success that it boosted not only the reputation of the UK construction industry but also the confidence of the UK population in the country’s ability to organise, build and run a major international event. Its success has been lauded as something from which clients and industry could learn. The ODA has established a comprehensive and informative body of evidence as part of a Learning Legacy. While the ODA is well aware of the many elements of the procurement and supply chain management, the complete end to end concept of how the Olympic supply chain procurements were managed has until now not been captured.</p> <p>For example, how does one buy the stage for an Olympic Games? How does one manage the details of thousands of contracts and the many firms of contractors, subcontractors and material suppliers and ensure that no one organisation adversely affects any other to the detriment of the programme?  How are a client’s requirements beyond those of the capital asset realised as part of the investment? How does one measure programme exposure, or manage performance?  How does one measure capacity and the ability of firms to cope with the work and manage the risks involved?</p> <p><i>Programme Procurement in Construction: Learning from London 2012</i> covers the planning and preparation of a programme’s procurement processes from understanding and developing the client’s requirements, to monitoring performance based on the benchmarks contractors set out in their own tender submissions. The emphasis is on a close attention to detail to avoid surprises, while keeping a focus on the total programme.  Purchase and Supplier Engineering provides an overview of managing the interest of firms in participating and the resulting capacity and workloads of all suppliers, including the main contractors and the critical subcontractors and material suppliers.</p> <p>Offering techniques, tips and lessons learnt from the implementation of PSE on London 2012 and Crossrail, this book is aimed at public and private sector clients, developers, senior management and those businesses and professionals involved in undertaking the procurement, supply chain management and delivery of multiple construction projects or complex major construction programmes.</p>
About the authors xi <p>List of figures and tables xiii</p> <p>Forewords from Sir John Armitt CBE, Howard Shiplee CBE, Martin Rowark and Professor Geoffrey E. Petts xv</p> <p>Preface xix</p> <p>List of acronyms xxvii</p> <p><b>1. Purchase and Supplier Engineering and the London 2012 Olympics 1</b></p> <p>Introduction 3</p> <p>The concept of Purchase and Supplier Engineering 4</p> <p>Programme organisation – an Olympic case study 8</p> <p>Procurement organisation structure – the Olympic Delivery Authority 11</p> <p>Roles and responsibilities 11</p> <p>Projects and programmes 13</p> <p>Concluding remarks 14</p> <p>Reference 15</p> <p><b>2. A framework for understanding markets in construction 17</b></p> <p>Introduction 18</p> <p>Managing the supply market 19</p> <p>The client and construction 23</p> <p>Projects, programmes and construction dynamics 25</p> <p>The client and the supply chain 27</p> <p>Defining the supply chain 28</p> <p>Outsourcing and subcontracting 31</p> <p>Understanding and managing conflict in construction 34</p> <p>Concluding remarks 39</p> <p>References 40</p> <p><b>3. The client’s values and the balanced scorecard 43</b></p> <p>Introduction 44</p> <p>Developing a framework for measuring performance 46</p> <p>All from a project vision 47</p> <p>Performance measurement 50</p> <p>Using balanced scorecards to communicate values and measure performance 53</p> <p>Developing a balanced scorecard 56</p> <p>Measures including key performance indicators 58</p> <p>Construction KPI measures of economic sustainability 58</p> <p>Social sustainability: Respect for people KPI measures 59</p> <p>Environmental sustainability: Environmental KPI measures 59</p> <p>Creating appropriate KPIs from a project vision and scorecard 62</p> <p>Concluding remarks 63</p> <p>References 64</p> <p><b>4. Packaging and contracting strategies 65</b></p> <p>Introduction 66</p> <p>What, why and how to buy 68</p> <p>Packaging strategy 70</p> <p>Gestalt theory 73</p> <p>Programme clusters 75</p> <p>Programme application 78</p> <p>Contracting strategy 79</p> <p>Forms of contract used in the 2012 Olympics procurement 79</p> <p>Classifi cation of contracts 82</p> <p>Concluding remarks 85</p> <p>References 88</p> <p><b>5. Common component and commodity strategies 89</b></p> <p>Introduction 90</p> <p>The benefits of a common component strategy 91</p> <p>Factors infl uencing the procurement of common components 93<br /> <br /> Market leverage 93</p> <p>Supply chain security 95</p> <p>Future maintenance and operations 95</p> <p>Design efficiencies 96</p> <p>Developing a common component strategy 96</p> <p>Stage 1: Performance criteria 97</p> <p>Stage 2: Assessment of benefits of implementing a common component strategy 98</p> <p>Stage 3: The benefi ts of a common component purchasing strategy 99</p> <p>The common component procurement strategy 100</p> <p>Concluding remarks 102</p> <p>References 102</p> <p><b>6. Engaging with suppliers: How to attract suppliers and increase interest and awareness 103</b></p> <p>Introduction 105</p> <p>Gathering market intelligence 107</p> <p>Supplier dialogue 109</p> <p>One-way supplier dialogue – Supply chain events 110</p> <p>One-way supplier dialogue – Industry days 110</p> <p>One way supplier dialogue – One-to-one meetings 111</p> <p>One-way supplier dialogue – Meet the buyer events 112</p> <p>One-way supplier dialogue – Meet the contractor events 113</p> <p>One-way supplier dialogue – Supplier guide 114</p> <p>One-way supplier dialogue – Business opportunities website 115</p> <p>One-way supplier dialogue – Opportunity slides 117</p> <p>Two-way supplier dialogue – Supplier registration and pre-assessment questionnaires 117</p> <p>Two-way supplier dialogue – Market soundings 120</p> <p>Concluding remarks 125</p> <p>Reference 126</p> <p><b>7. eSourcing and process codifi cation: Standardising programme procurements 127</b></p> <p>Introduction 128</p> <p>The guiding principles of a robust procurement process 129</p> <p>Standardising procurement documentation 130</p> <p>Security of the procurement system 131</p> <p>Evaluation of tenders 132</p> <p>The application of electronic tools in the procurement process 133</p> <p>eSourcing 134</p> <p>eEvaluation 139</p> <p>Aspects of managing systematic procurement processes 141</p> <p>Standard processes 141</p> <p>Schools of excellence 142</p> <p>Governance 143</p> <p>Assurance 144</p> <p>Training 145</p> <p>The milestones of procurement reporting 146</p> <p>Standardisation and codification of the procurement process 147</p> <p>Stage gate 1 – Agreeing the procurement strategy 148</p> <p>Stage gate 2 – Tender documentation completion 148</p> <p>Stage gate 3 – Tender list agreement 149</p> <p>Stage gate 4 – The tender report 149</p> <p>Procurement reporting 151</p> <p>Concluding remarks 151</p> <p>References 154</p> <p><b>8. Managing supply chain involvement across a programme 155</b></p> <p>Introduction 156</p> <p>Supplier relationship management 157</p> <p>Remaining in contact with all firms who tender for work 159</p> <p>Supply chain mapping 162</p> <p>Concluding remarks 167</p> <p>Reference 168</p> <p><b>9. Due diligence and the management of capacity 169</b></p> <p>Introduction 170</p> <p>Modelling supplier utilisation 170</p> <p>Monitoring the fi nancial strength of suppliers 180</p> <p>Sub-tier supplier engineering 182</p> <p>Identifying critical suppliers 185</p> <p>Concluding remarks 189</p> <p>References 191</p> <p><b>10. Performance management 193</b></p> <p>Introduction 195</p> <p>The Purchase and Supplier Engineering model and programme management 195</p> <p>Purchase and Supplier Engineering and the programme management office 197</p> <p>Performance management within Purchase and Supplier Engineering 197</p> <p>Analysis 198</p> <p>Control 199</p> <p>Performance improvement through Purchase and Supplier Engineering 200</p> <p>Benchmarking 201</p> <p>Concluding remarks 201</p> <p>Index 205</p>
<p><b>John Mead, Director, Davis Langdon</b><br />30 years of experience working at all levels within the construction sector, including on site as a trade contractor, in project management, policy development for the Construction Industry Council and with the Movement for Innovation (M4I). And for the last 8 years within construction consultancy specialising in supply chain management.<br />He is a Director at Davis Langdon, an AECOM Company and works within the Program Management team leading the supply chain management function for a number of clients, programs and projects.<br />John currently divides his time between the Supply Chain Management function for the Olympic Delivery Authority for the delivery of the infrastructure for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. A project which until recently he led for over 3 years and the Crossrail programme where he is taking the strategy and implementation he developed and delivered for ODA and is now implementing on this program.<br />John has captured the learning from his previous roles including the success achieved for ODA and now being delivered for Crossrail, and has developed the Purchase and Supplier Engineering service which forms part of the Davis Langdon Program Management.</p> <p><b>Stephen Gruneberg, Reader, University of Westminster<br /></b>Visiting Fellow, Faculty of the Built Environment, Northumbria University, and Teaching Fellow, (Part-time), Development Planning Unit, Bartlett School, UCL.<br />Publications include: (2008) Construction and Property Markets in a Changing World Economy in Les Ruddock (ed) <i>Economics for the Modern Built Environment,</i> Taylor and Francis (2000) <i>The Economics of the Modern Construction Sector</i>, (with G Ive), Macmillan (2000)<i>The Economics of the Modern Construction Firm</i>, (with G Ive), Macmillan, (2000) The Building Industry and the Building Process. in Knox P., and Ozolins P., <i>Design Professionals and the Built Environment</i>, John Wiley, USA, (1997) <i>Construction Economics; an introduction</i>, Macmillan.</p>
<p>"This book … adds to the impressive 'legacy' of learning which is still emerging from the successful delivery of the London 2012 construction programme. The authors combine the reforming zeal of a champion for change, who was there every step of the way, with academic rigour, and the result is delivered with impressive passion and commitment to the topic … All spenders and suppliers need to read this, to understand how conventional understandings of procurement fall so dramatically short when applied to high value-high risk acquisitions, which invariably is what large construction projects represent."<br />--<b>Don Ward</b>, Chief Executive, Constructing Excellence, UK</p> <p>Successful construction is often attributed to one or more aspects of the delivery process from good planning, design and clever engineering to efficient project management and quality construction. Before any of these disciplines can begin, they all require some form of procurement to select the team or supply chain to meet a client’s or a project’s specific requirements. The concept of PSE - Purchase and Supplier Engineering - originated in the procurement of the construction and infrastructure required to stage the 30th Olympiad in London during 2012. At the time of writing PSE has successfully delivered almost £25bn of public procurement meeting client and project requirements and without legal challenge.</p> <p>The construction of the venues and infrastructure needed to stage London 2012 was such a resounding success that it boosted not only the reputation of the UK construction industry but also the confidence of the UK population in the country’s ability to organise, build and run a major international event. Its success has been lauded as something from which clients and industry could learn. The ODA has established a comprehensive and informative body of evidence as part of a Learning Legacy. While the ODA is well aware of the many elements of the procurement and supply chain management, the complete end to end concept of how the Olympic supply chain procurements were managed has until now not been captured.</p> <p>For example, how does one buy the stage for an Olympic Games? How does one manage the details of thousands of contracts and the many firms of contractors, subcontractors and material suppliers and ensure that no one organisation adversely affects any other to the detriment of the programme? How are a client’s requirements beyond those of the capital asset realised as part of the investment? How does one measure programme exposure, or manage performance? How does one measure capacity and the ability of firms to cope with the work and manage the risks involved?</p> <p><i>Programme Procurement in Construction: Learning from London 2012</i> covers the planning and preparation of a programme’s procurement processes from understanding and developing the client’s requirements, to monitoring performance based on the benchmarks contractors set out in their own tender submissions. The emphasis is on a close attention to detail to avoid surprises, while keeping a focus on the total programme. Purchase and Supplier Engineering provides an overview of managing the interest of firms in participating and the resulting capacity and workloads of all suppliers, including the main contractors and the critical subcontractors and material suppliers.</p> <p>Offering techniques, tips and lessons learnt from the implementation of PSE on London 2012 and Crossrail, this book is aimed at public and private sector clients, developers, senior management and those businesses and professionals involved in undertaking the procurement, supply chain management and delivery of multiple construction projects or complex major construction programmes.</p>
<p>‘This book … adds to the impressive ‘legacy’ of learning which is still emerging from the successful delivery of the London 2012 construction programme. The authors combine the reforming zeal of a champion for change, who was there every step of the way, with academic rigour, and the result is delivered with impressive passion and commitment to the topic … All spenders and suppliers need to read this, to understand how conventional understandings of procurement fall so dramatically short when applied to high value-high risk acquisitions, which invariably is what large construction projects represent.’     </p>

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