Contracting Policy and Procedures |
No formal contractor policy or procedures exist. Everyone manages contractors differently, or applies the same approach to all contracts. |
A number of contracting procedures exist to ensure compliance and control:
• Procedures are primarily driven by financial requirements.
• Compliance with health and safety regulations is covered in detail.
• There is a general understanding that different contracting types exist.
• Contractors are largely managed based on instinct. |
A formal contracting policy ,with supporting procedures, exists:
• Contractor categories are defined based on work criticality, costs and risks.
• The policy defines criteria for deciding when work should be contracted out.
• The policy specifies how different contractors should be managed.
• Detailed contracting procedures with steps and responsibilities exist and are accepted by all role players. |
The contracting policy and procedures have been expanded and refined:
• The current policy and procedures have been implemented and evaluated.
• The performance management process for contractors is defined.
• The policy and procedures provide sustainable development guidelines.
• The contractor development focus is defined, e.g. develop locals, reduce dependency, or improve performance. |
The policy is reviewed regularly in line with the AM Strategy:
• Changes in legislation and/or working conditions are addressed.
• Changes in operational conditions or the AM Strategy are addressed.
• All contract incidents or problems have been analysed and addressed.
• Contractors from all categories are included in the review process. |
Contractor Selection |
There is no guideline or process for selecting a contractor. Everyone uses his own judgement, which is normally based on price or some ulterior motive. |
The policy specifies that contractors are selected based on the lowest price:
• A procedure defines the format and number of quotations to be obtained.
• Extensive motivation is required to accept a higher quotation.
• A list of approved contractors is available for a small amount of generic outsourced work. |
Contractor selection criteria are category specific:
• Selection criteria have been defined for each of the 4 contractor categories.
• These criteria include price, technical competence and EHS track record.
• A formal selection procedure defines the steps and responsibilities involved.
• A list of approved contractors exists for all significant outsourced work. |
Contractor selection is based on more advanced criteria:
• Previous performance is considered.
• EHS compliance is considered.
• Additional value-adding services are considered.
• Affirmative action and economic empowerment are considered.
• The list of approved contractors is kept up-to-date. |
The selection process is dynamic:
• The criteria are updated in line with the organisations strategy and circumstances.
• The selection process supports the sustainable development policy.
• It considers the contractors own continuous improvement programme (e.g. ISO 9001 or 14001). |
Contractual Agreement |
No formal contracting agreements are documented. The contractors quotation is the only form of agreement available. |
A generic contractor agreement template is available for contract work:
• The agreement is updated for each new contract, but only contains the agreed price and high level deliverables.
• EHS requirements are specified.
• Formal acceptance is acknowledged by the contractors signature. |
The format of the contractual agreement and the process have been formalised:
• A standard agreement template exists for each contractor category.
• The contractual agreement covers all aspects defined in the contracting policy.
• Specific deliverables and responsibilities are listed in an SLA.
• The payment process enforces compliance with the agreement.
• The standard guidelines facilitate fast negotiations between parties. |
Formal agreements are in place according to a standards:
• All categories of contracts have signed agreements.
• Agreements cover all aspects of contractor management, including payment, EHS, performance and roles.
• Forward purchase agreements are in place for regular non-critical contracts.
• Formal recognised contract negotiation practices are used to define the deliverables and price. |
The EAMS is used to manage the agreements with contractors:
• Contractors are aware of their role in implementing the AM Strategy.
• The EAMS can facilitate full contractor management and quality assurance (QA).
• Performance targets are benchmarked to ensure that they are realistic.
• Contract negotiations focus on developing a win-win agreement for both company and contractor. |
Work Management |
The work performed by contractors is managed in an ad hoc way. Instructions are normally verbal, leading to poor control and misalignment with the internal asset management systems. |
Contract owners manage contractors informally with different levels of success:
• Field releases or purchase orders are used for instructions to contractors.
• The use of the internal safety procedures (e.g. permits) is enforced.
• Safe working procedures are available to contractors but not always used.
• Contract owners have not had any training in contractor management. |
Contractors are managed via internal work orders from the CMMS/EAMS:
• All contracted work is issued via WOs.
• Completed WOs are returned and captured as history in the CMMS/EAMS.
• The return and completeness of WOs is a pre-requisite for payment.
• Safe working procedures are referenced on the WOs.
• Persons responsible for contractors had training in contractor management. |
Contractors are managed via the Work Planning and Control system:
• All contract work is formally planned and scheduled.
• EHS requirements such as permits and risk assessments are included on the WO.
• Contractors participate in weekly scheduling meetings to align with maintenance and operational activities.
• No contractor is allowed to work on assets without a formal WO.
• KPIs such as schedule compliance and backlog are applied to contractors. |
The EAMS enables real time management of contractors:
• Contractors record work progress and feedback on-line (via a PDA or tablet.)
• WO status is tracked on-line.
• Response times are monitored in real time for critical SLA elements.
• Problem areas are automatically escalated to the appropriate authority.
• Contractors participate in problem solving and improvement initiatives. |
Performance and Quality Management |
The quality of contract work is not checked via a formal process. This leads to frequent rework, repetitive failures and allocation of blame between the organisation and the contractor. |
Performance management is limited to an informal review of work quality:
• Ad hoc checks are performed by supervisors during walk-abouts.
• Completed work is checked for sign-off before payment.
• Extra quality checks are done when using a contractor for the first time.
• Some disputes occur because the scope of work and standards are unclear. |
Performance management is formalised:
• A formal procedure with clear roles exists for over-inspections and QA.
• More effort is spent to manage critical contractors.
• Less critical contracts are frequently not managed closely.
• Most contract KPIs are generic and not always objective.
• Contract work is reviewed at least once during execution, with a final review after completion. |
The performance management process has been streamlined:
• The process is category-specific and focuses on significant contracts.
• Specific and objective KPIs are used, with predefined incentives and penalties.
• The performance of all contractors is regularly reviewed against their SLAs.
• Over-inspection results are managed and recorded via the EAMS.
• Results are used for future contractor selection. |
The EAMS facilitates the performance management of significant contracts:
• The EAMS is used to measure contract deliverables against the SLA.
• WOs make provision for detailed quality assurance steps.
• Contractors use the EAMS to view their performance and drive improvements.
• Response times for critical SLA items are monitored electronically and problems are escalated automatically. |
Contract Admin. |
Contract administration is done in an informal and ad hoc manner, since it is not recognised as a specialist function. As a result, there are conflicts and confusion, and time is wasted in processing transactions that involve contractors. |
Contract administration is more structured but still informal:
• Standard procurement rules apply to contracts and contractors.
• Contractors are paid on receipt of formal invoices.
• Meetings and interactions with contractors happen on an ad-hoc basis. |
A formal contract administration process is in place:
• A detailed procedure exists with clear responsibilities and support documents.
• People responsible for contract administration had formal training.
• A system exists to store and access contractor records and documents.
• Interaction with contractors happens according to clear guidelines. |
Contract administration is a streamlined specialist function:
• Forward purchasing agreements are in place for frequent low value contracts to facilitate automated payment.
• Payment of penalties and incentives are integrated with these FPAs.
• Contract agreements are reviewed at set intervals.
• Disputes are managed formally. |
Contract administration effectiveness is measured and automated:
• Contract administration staff are measured on contract performance.
• Contract close-out reports cover lessons learnt and contractor performance.
• Closeout reports are stored and used for future contractor selection.
• FPAs are used extensively across all contractor categories. |
Contractor EHS Management |
Contractors are expected to perform the work with minimum effort and expense. The contractor is also entirely responsible for all EHS problems on the contract. As a result, there are frequent EHS incidents on contracts. |
EHS performance on contracts is treated with varying levels of importance:
• Contractors have to meet initial EHS pre-qualification requirements.
• The focus on EHS frequently decreases during the contract execution.
• Standards are frequently lowered when contractors do not meet them.
• Contractors have to use their own resources to achieve EHS standards. |
EHS is a key focus area during contract allocation and execution:
• Contractor pre-qualification requires proof of a working EHS management system conforming to minimum criteria.
• EHS induction programs are developed for each contractor category.
• The organisation and contractors run joint EHS initiatives.
• EHS conformance is a key element of the performance and quality review. |
The organisation invests in contractor EHS capability to ensure full compliance:
• All the standard internal EHS practices apply in full to all contractors.
• Contractors are rewarded for reaching the organisations EHS targets.
• EHS training is provided to contractors.
• Formal EHS risk assessments are done jointly before contract commencement.
• Safety checks are implemented prior to all contracted work. |
There is a joint zero tolerance approach to contractor EHS practices:
• EHS problems are solved jointly and proactively with contractors.
• Both parties expect and accept that work will be postponed until EHS standards are met.
• Evidence proves that the contractors EHS performance is world class. |