Tag Archive for government contracts

How to apply for public sector tendering as a small business

Originally written by Melanie Bryan on Small Business
Demystifying public sector tendering
Would you like an introduction to a client who:

Spends around £284bn each year on goods and services?
Issues around 1,500 new contract opportunities each week?
Pays on time and won’t go bust?
Wants SMEs to be suppliers – awards around 59 per cent of contracts by value to small businesses?

Well, the good news is that you can – that client is the public sector. No wonder Lord Young named the public sector as the client to target for micro-businesses that want to grow.
Winning public sector contracts can also help stabilise your cashflow. For example, contracts for services are usually for at least a year and most small suppliers get paid within 30 days of submitting an accurate invoice and many are paid within 14 days.
And remember that public sector is quite wide; for example, it includes government, local authorities, NHS, police and fire services. There are also several other organisations who use similar procurement processes including universities, construction, and utility companies.
What’s more the public sector recognises that SMEs can offer better value, higher quality service, greater flexibility and can be more innovative than larger companies. Therefore it wants more to become suppliers and

Read more...

How to apply for public sector tendering as a small business

Originally written by Melanie Bryan on Small Business
Demystifying public sector tendering
Would you like an introduction to a client who:

Spends around £284bn each year on goods and services?
Issues around 1,500 new contract opportunities each week?
Pays on time and won’t go bust?
Wants SMEs to be suppliers – awards around 59 per cent of contracts by value to small businesses?

Well, the good news is that you can – that client is the public sector. No wonder Lord Young named the public sector as the client to target for micro-businesses that want to grow.
Winning public sector contracts can also help stabilise your cashflow. For example, contracts for services are usually for at least a year and most small suppliers get paid within 30 days of submitting an accurate invoice and many are paid within 14 days.
And remember that public sector is quite wide; for example, it includes government, local authorities, NHS, police and fire services. There are also several other organisations who use similar procurement processes including universities, construction, and utility companies.
What’s more the public sector recognises that SMEs can offer better value, higher quality service, greater flexibility and can be more innovative than larger companies. Therefore it wants more to become suppliers and

Read more...

Whitehall fails its own test, rewarding outsourcers who pay SMEs late

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Whitehall has repeatedly flunked its own test for dropping large government outsourcers who fail to pay small business subcontractors on time.
Under plans coming into force in September, outsourcers which fail to pay 95pc of subcontractors within 60 days risk being frozen out of public-sector procurement, which is worth £60bn a year. The rules will apply to all Government contracts worth more than £5m. As of now, four-fifths of Government outsources would be excluded from bidding on contracts.
However, according to research by Tussell, a data provider on UK government expenditure, Whitehall has rewarded large outsourcers over 200 contracts, despite them have already failed the 95pc threshold. The combined contracts were worth £90bn.
The Ministry of Defence has been the worst culprit; out of 154 contracts worth more than £5m awarded since 2015, 60 have gone to suppliers which did not meet the 95pc threshold.
The Department for Transport also had a poor record: it gave big contracts to 36 suppliers which did not meet the threshold, from a total of 75.
The Department for Work and Pensions has awarded 25 contracts to late-paying large outsourcers since 2015.
Late payments force 50,000 small businesses to shut every year.
Mental health

Read more...

Why are smaller businesses still struggling to win government contracts?

The procurement process for smaller contracts currently being undertaken by the Crown Commercial Service (CCS) once again talks about engagement of SMEs but when you read into the detail the guidelines, terms and commercial framework seem to favour larger companies. In particular, the risk associated with blind bidding for work can be very dangerous for
The post Why are smaller businesses still struggling to win government contracts? appeared first on Small Business.

Read more...