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Procurement Transformation State of North Carolina. Jocelyn Thornton, C.P.M. Transformation Project Manager April 24-25, 2012. Background. On January 12, 2009, Governor Perdue issued Executive Order No. 5, which created the Budget Reform and Accountability Commission (BRAC).
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Procurement Transformation State of North Carolina Jocelyn Thornton, C.P.M. Transformation Project Manager April 24-25, 2012
Background • On January 12, 2009, Governor Perdue issued Executive Order No. 5, which created the Budget Reform and Accountability Commission (BRAC). • At approximately the same time, the Office of State Budget and Management (OSBM) initiated a review of statewide procurement as a result of Executive Order No. 4, NC Open Book • The State has a complex set of procurement processes and systems • Decentralized structures exist, with little collaboration among the agencies to identify what improvements are needed • Lack of Central Compliance Resources, Stringent Training Standards
“Create a customer-focused enterprise to achieve increased procurement effectiveness, efficiency, and compliance resulting in significant financial benefit for taxpayers by reducing the costs of acquiring goods and services.” Project Vision
Expected Benefits • Streamline procurement functions across state government by increasing efficiencies, leveraging buying power and reducing overlap of key functions. • Better value and more effective use of tax dollars • More consistency across the enterprise to leverage buying power • More efficient processes and systems to provide customers with what they need—when they need it • Employees working together to better serve their customers and the taxpayers
Guiding Principles • Best Value - Procure at the lowest total cost of ownership • Customer Focus - Address all stakeholders’ business needs • Delivery Excellence - Develop, maintain, and execute standardized, repeatable procurement processes and procedures • Compliance and Accountability - Enforce compliance with statutes, administrative codes, executive orders, and policies • Operational Efficiency - Align people, processes, and technology • Workforce Excellence – Build and maintain the right knowledge and skills • Strategic Planning - Strategically plan procurement activities
Six Cross-functional Teams • Change Management and Communications • eight members representing six agencies • Contract Management and Compliance • nine Members representing seven agencies • Policies and Procedures • nine members representing seven agencies • Staff Organization and Training • sixteen members representing ten agencies • Strategic Sourcing • eleven Members representing six agencies • Governance • eight Members representing five agencies
Contract Management and Compliance • Establish a standard contract management process • Create standard contract templates such as: • Contract close-out checklist • Contract file checklist • Contractor performance checklist • Develop and deploy a revised contract administration/monitoring guide • Finalize contract monitoring requirements, per SB 1213
Change Management and Communications • Consider communications best practices • Create standard communications vehicles • Ensure timely information sharing • Conduct readiness survey to gauge the effectiveness of initiatives, and identify issues • Closely align the change management effort with program leadership • Leverage Change Agents as a way of formalizing peer-to-peer information sharing • Leverage various forums to share successes and leading practices
Policies and Procedures • Responsible for recommending improvements to North Carolina procurement related statues and administrative codes to improve • consistency, streamline processes, and encourage best value • procurement • Consolidate and streamline relevant statutes and administrative codes • Clarify rules and exemptions to statutes • Review and modify IFB/RFP/RFQ templates where appropriate
Staff Organization and Training • Charged with assessing current procurement training, organizational structure, job profiles, titles and existing career paths • Establish a Strategic Sourcing Group within State Procurement • Establish an Open Market Group within State Procurement • Establish an Operations group within State Procurement • Deploy standardized job titles and job profiles • Create a single purchasing manual for use by all state procurement organizations • Deploy a comprehensive procurement training program
Strategic Sourcing • Responsible for implementing a statewide strategic sourcing methodology • Focus on the initial commodity and service groups which will be sourced • Assess opportunities and prioritize Wave I, II and III categories • Solicit input from end users • Develop category strategy • Negotiate and develop sourcing recommendations • Implement agreements • Monitor and manage agreements proactively
Governance • Charged with recommending a structure, processes, and • measurements to govern the procurement function after transformation • Recommend a Procurement Governance Team with representatives from State agencies, community colleges, universities, LEAs, and local governments • Develop a set of key procurement performance metrics • Continue oversight and guidance through use of a diversified steering committee
Technology Upgrade • Online catalog Improvement • Initiative began in October 2011 and had three primary objectives • Improve catalog content • Refine the processes utilized to develop new catalogs • Establish a continuous improvement program
Summary: Current Priorities: • Develop standard contract administration/monitoring guide • Develop standard procurement manual • Develop standard templates and memo’s • Deploy training and update websites for refresher training and reference • Establish tools for continual communication among agencies • Identify and recommend procurement related changes to General Statues, Administrative Code and Operating Procedures • Develop key performance indicators • Prioritize categories for sourcing; statewide contracts (goods & services) • Methodology to save dollars and improve processed for tax payer • Develop modernized job classifications for purchasing positions • Outline purchasing professional career path
Conclusion • Long term process 2 – 3 years to implement numerous initiatives • No longer a project – Just how we conduct procurement
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