1. SSP FALL SEMINARS 2016: Successfully Executing an RFP Process
RFP Dos (and some Don’ts)
Pam Harley SENIOR CONSULTANT, CLARKE & COMPANY
5 October 2016
TEL 202 545 7258
EMAIL pharley@clarke-company.com
2. PUBLISHER—Long tenure in publishing division at
American Psychiatric Association, where I held various
roles that involved RFP management from the publisher
perspective.
SOFTWARE VENDOR—Stint at Silverchair, where I was
involved in responding to a LOT of RFPs for semantic
services, online product development, and platform
hosting. Including a “Bakeoff”!
CONSULTANT—Currently with Clarke & Company,
where we help clients manage various types of RFPs as
well as respond to RFPs for our consulting services.
Why Me?
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DIGITAL / CONTENT STRATEGY
PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
CUSTOMER / INDUSTRY INSIGHT
SALES / MARKETING STRATEGY
BUSINESS OPERATIONS ANALYSIS
CLARKE & COMPANY
4. Make sure the Request for Proposal (RFP) process is the right tool for
your needs.
§ Do you have a clear understanding of the business needs the solution is
intended to solve? Is your scope sufficiently focused?
§ Do you have detailed requirements with internal agreement around them?
§ Do you have a good understanding of the solutions on the market? Do you have
a good sense of the viable vendors/partners?
§ Do you have multiple internal stakeholders and need an inclusive and unbiased
approach to decision making?
§ Are you ready to make a decision/purchase?
RFP Dos (and some Don’ts)
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5. When is the RFP process NOT the right tool?
§ As a replacement for doing your own research (into potential solutions on the
market)
§ To vet dissimilar solutions (where “apples to apples” comparison is not
possible)
§ To get high-level cost estimates for budgeting
§ When your business goals are unclear
§ When you lack a clear understanding of your requirements
RFP Dos (and some Don’ts)
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6. What if you aren’t sure? Start with a Project Charter.
§ Project Charter = statement of scope, objectives, and stakeholders in a project.
§ The Project Charter defines:
• Situation/problem and how it fits into company strategy
• Desired outcomes and results
• Value of taking on the project
• How success in meeting objectives will be measured
• In-scope and out-of-scope items
• Project team and decision-makers
• Parameters such as business-critical dates and budget that impact the project
§ Use the Project Charter to help decide what tool (RFP, RFQ, RFI) is best for
getting at what you needed.
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7. Remember: The RFP is a process, not a document.
§ Design a process that helps you evaluate the potential solutions and select the one
that best fits your needs.
§ Keep lines of communication with potential vendors/partners open throughout the
process (don’t disappear after the RFP is released).
§ Be responsive to requests for more information/clarifications.
§ BUT—give vendors a deadline well in advance of the proposal due date for
questions/clarifications. Otherwise you’ll have a frantic last-minute rush of requests.
§ Ask for expressions of interest from vendors before you release the RFP. On release
of the RFP, ask for confirmation that vendor will be submitting a proposal so you’ll
know how many proposals you’ll get.
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8. Structure the RFP process so that it allows you to identify true
differentiators between vendors/partners and allows you to focus on
what matters most to YOUR organization.
§ Prioritize requirements internally.
§ When evaluating solutions, weight business needs based on priority (all
requirements are not equal!)
§ Avoid asking vendors for things that you know you won’t use in your evaluation.
§ Look beyond “table stakes”—how do the solutions differ? How do those differences
align with your business priorities?
§ Beware vaporware (“Show me on a live site.” “How many times have you deployed
this solution? For which clients?).
§ Do not discount cultural fit.
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9. Allow sufficient time and breathing room in the RFP schedule.
§ Plan ahead—it’s much easier to make good decisions and negotiate good
agreements when you have enough time.
• Time to create the RFP documentation and process
• Send a “save the date” so vendors can set aside time
• Time for vendors to respond to the RFP
• Time to winnow to finalists
• Time for vendors to prep for finalist presentations
• Time for your organization to analyze responses and make a decision
§ Be aware of internal resourcing constraints (e.g., annual meetings).
§ Stick to the schedule and keep the momentum going—don’t let any phase
languish.
Rushing any phase of the process can put the outcome at risk.
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10. Think strategically about what information about your business to share
as part of the RFP process.
§ What information is “must have” in order for vendors to prepare proposals/
offers? Should any information be held back (e.g., certain category of revenue,
current number of subscribers) to allow you to better evaluate proposal
responses?
§ Clarity and accuracy in information provided in the RFP are critical. (This can be
more challenging that you think, as the RFP may aggregate information from
different parts of your organization.)
§ Your budget?
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11. Remember: You are not done until you have an executed contract.
§ Have general agreement on financial/business terms, roles/responsibilities before
contract negotiations begin.
§ A consultant can be helpful as a “buffer” between staff and vendor/partner during
negotiations.
§ Get good legal input (from someone knowledgeable about publishing).
§ What happens on termination of the contract? (Do you get your content back? In what
form? What about subscriber data?) Write exit conditions into the contract.
§ Watch out for contract term lengths that extend too far into the future—what seems like
a good deal now might not be 7 years from now.
§ Watch out for auto-renewals as well—they can be timesavers, but if they specify more
than a year you risk locking yourself into a too-long agreement by default.
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12. Get help (from a consultant) if you need it.
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14. § High-value, mission-critical initiative and you want to accelerate speed of the
project
§ Seek a broad view of the market and what similar organizations are doing
§ Insufficient industry/technology experience on internal team to properly
complete a comprehensive RFP
§ Extra bandwidth—just can’t do it in house because not enough time
§ Need a fresh perspective
§ Provide a non-partisan authority, objectivity, impartial third party (i.e.,
“politics”…)
§ Counterbalance information asymmetry when dealing with vendors,
commercial publishers, or other organizations
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When Should You Consider a Consultant?
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15. § Reach out to your network—who have they worked with to solve similar
problems?
§ Look for a consultant who
• Has a good track record with similar organizations
• Has repeat clients
• Understands the nuances of your market
§ Consider whether consultants from outside your professional space will need
extra time (and more of your money) to get up to speed in understanding your
business.
How Do You Pick the Right Consultant?
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16. § Engage actively with consultants as part of the selection process.
• Does consultant understand your business? Your challenges? Does consultant solicit your
input?
• Engage in dialog about your questions, challenges—what is consultant’s proposed
approach? Does it resonate?
• Is the consultant responsive?
• Do you have good rapport with the consultant? Respect his/her input?
• Look for a consultant who acts like a peer, or a partner—not a vendor.
How Do You Pick the Right Consultant?
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17. § Unless schedule, budget, and scope are well defined up front, an RFP is likely to
not be your best tool to select a consultant.
• Proposals that result from RFPs can be difficult to compare as they may assume very
different scope, approach, timeline, and budget.
§ Don’t hesitate to negotiate with a consultant if you like their approach—they
may be able to adjust approach without loss of results if they have a better idea
of your budget.
§ Be on the lookout for bias—e.g., does the consultant have a vested interest in a
particular vendor or software?
How Do You Pick the Right Consultant?
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