Sole-Source Transactions
The record is clear: the quality of
the relationship between the buyer and the service provider directly relates to
the success of outsourcing. While there's a definite art to creating and
nurturing a mutually-beneficial relationship in a competitive setting, you
shouldn’t underestimate the feasibility of formulating or expanding an existing
relationship without competition.
A variety of reasons impact an
enterprise’s decision to engage or expand an outsourcing relationship without
going through the time and expense of a competitive solicitation. Most
frequently, sole-source outsourcing transactions arise from an existing
client-provider relationship and often they result from the match of unique
requirements and capabilities. Taking a “pilot” relationship to larger scale is
a common blend of these motives.
For higher transaction value arrangements,
as well as engagements that address mission-critical scope, business executives
commonly require a validation of the market-worthiness a sole-source
transaction. This increased oversight on financial commitments demands that
objective third-part expertise validates and affirms the essence of the
relationship terms.
Ø
Your advisor and legal counsel should be
aligned to your business objectives, using efficient processes to achieve the
level of contractual framework required to support the relationship envisioned
by the parties
Ø
You intended service provider partner
should be motivated to engage in a proactive dialogue with an industry expert
with the aim of establishing a sound commercial
agreement
Ø
As all transactions entail certain risks,
you should apply commonly-recognized terms and conditions that frame the
agreement to industry norms
Ø You should ensure that your advisor possesses and asserts the level of industry-recognized expertise appropriate for ensuring sound business practices
In supporting your sole-source
transaction, TPI will achieve the foundation of a solid outsourcing agreement,
whether we’re starting from a clean slate or expanding an existing
relationship:
►
Clarity of
expectations
►
Defined services and
prices
►
Volume-based
pricing
►
Market-based
terms
►
Proven flexibility through categories of
change
►
Transparency and consistency of decision
process
►
Organizational change
management
TPI’s informed objectivity ensures that
the resulting contract meets the essential requirements of a sound business
agreement:
►
Confidence in the market-worthiness of the
contractual terms
►
Assessment of Client management/governance
responsibilities
►
Validation of essential contractual
assumptions
►
Evaluation of financial implications
through scenario modeling
►
Allocation of essential service measure
principles
►
Establishment of equitable gainsharing /
value-creation principles
Sole-source agreements can work to the mutual benefit of the parties, but they require the design and implementation that come from informed practice.
For more information, contact:
Services
- Operational Assessments
- Strategy and Business Case for Change
- Shared Services
- Internal Service Optimization
- Captive Offshore
- Outsourcing
- Service Management
Business Support Functions
- Applications Development & Maintenance (ADM)
- Corporate Real Estate
- Contact Center Services
- Finance & Accounting (F&A)
- Human Resources
- Information Technology (IT) Infrastructure
- Procurement
