Robert Breedon
Partner
Article
10
In our Insight New Update to the Cabinet Office Outsourcing Playbook: your essential roadmap to the second edition, we flagged the arrival of the second edition of the Cabinet Office's Outsourcing Playbook and updated accompanying guidance notes.
In this latest Insight, the third instalment in our series exploring the new and existing policies and how these have shaped procurements in practice, we look at the 11 key policies set out in the Playbook, which are at the core of the reforms that the government believes are necessary in order to improve future outsourcing and insourcing. We take you through what the policies are, tell you where to find the details and share our thoughts on how the policies have played out in practice over the past year.
A summary of the key policies can be found at the front of the Outsourcing Playbook (pages 8 and 9), with the detail embedded within its chapters and the associated Guidance Notes. The bulk of the policies (7 of the 11) are found in the chapters related to the preparation and planning stage, aligning with the government's clear intent to improve the design of outsourcing and insourcing projects from their inception.
It should be noted that not all of the policies apply to all projects. Three of the policies only apply to 'complex' projects, being those involving: (i) first generation outsourcing; (ii) significant service delivery transformation; (iii) obtaining services from markets with limited competition or where government is the only customer; and/or (iv) novel or contentious services.
The eight policies which apply to ALL outsourcing projects are:
The 11 key policies remain the same as those set out in the first edition of the Outsourcing Playbook. There has been a bit of rebadging (i.e. 'Make versus Buy' assessments are now Delivery Model Assessments), but the key changes are the addition of more detailed guidance on how to implement some of the policies (particularly on Should Cost Modelling, piloting and the new Delivery Model Assessment framework).
The reaction from suppliers to the 11 Key Policies has been generally positive. We are increasingly seeing our clients engage in detailed, constructive and informed discussion regarding risk allocation - with both sides having the confidence to probe and challenge positions across the negotiation table and internally based on the Playbook's clear recommendations. We are seeing a shift from the risk adverse approach of the past - in particular, in relation to the setting of liability caps and the approach to due diligence data.
Equally, the increased focus on doing the ground work in the early stages of a procurement is also helping to tackle many of the issues that we typically see arise. Positions set out in proposed contracts have been better supported by fuller service data and analysis - shortcutting the more difficult discussions.
Of all the policies, the least popular from the supplier community has been the idea of publishing performance against certain KPIs. We are seeing suppliers increasingly focus on the thresholds set against those KPIs which are to be published - and a degree of 'low balling' to mitigate risk.
In terms of challenges, ensuring that the relevant Departments have sufficient resource and capability in order to undertake some of the measures proposed was always going to be key. The policies embody the gold standard - but also require considerable investment. Support has been out there, with the Cabinet Office using Knowledge Drop sessions and targeted. We understand compliance is being assured through Departments' governance processes and central Cabinet Office controls (for projects over £10 million total value). Suppliers are also encouraged to report any concerns about Department's compliance with the policies to the Public Procurement Review Service. This is a tool that we have seen used, or threatened, on occasion.
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