Supplying Principles and Practices > USPS Supplying Practices Process Step 2: Evaluate Sources > Form Proposal Evaluation Team
Form Proposal Evaluation Team
The Proposal Evaluation Team is responsible for evaluating and comparing
the responses to the proposal in accordance with the proposal evaluation
strategy developed for the purchase. Other responsibilities of the Proposal
Evaluation Team include:
• Participating in applicable oral presentations, interviews, and site
surveys
• Scoring and ranking proposals based on established proposal
evaluation factors
Forming the Proposal Evaluation Team, performing the evaluation, and
awarding the contract are the links between a successful request for
proposals (RFP) effort and a successful project. Effective planning during
Process Step 2: Evaluate Sources will lead to the selection of the optimal
supplier and achievement of best value. Supplier selection is a strategic
process that directly affects the Postal Service's competitive advantage;
forming the Proposal Evaluation Team is part of this process and includes:
• Identifying the required team member skills
• Identifying and selecting members
• Identifying and selecting functions
Some of these decisions are dictated by the proposal's complexity and
scope, and others are standard considerations that are made for each
evaluation, disregarding the type of purchase.
The Proposal Evaluation Team should include experienced professionals with
an appropriate level of market knowledge to assist in the evaluation.
Depending on the Purchase/SCM Team's assessment of the business
situation, a Proposal Evaluation Team chairperson may be appointed. Ideally,
those involved will have previous experience working on purchases of a
similar nature, scale, and complexity. Specifically, those involved (or the
Proposal Evaluation Team as a whole) will require skills that include:
• Market knowledge - understand suppliers' responses in context
(e.g., market-specific terms and conventions, commercial
pressures on suppliers)
• Business knowledge - relate the responses received to the
wider organizational picture (e.g., relation between this
requirement and strategic aims or other relevant contracts,
projects, or requirements)
• Purchasing skills - knowledge of procedures to be followed and
deliverables required; understanding of the scope and aims of the
proposal evaluation strategy and its context in the wider purchase
process
• Understanding of the requirements - assess the responses to
the requirements (e.g., in terms of business processes involved,
likely transaction volumes/service levels required, relevant
technical aspects)
Members can be from the Purchase/SCM Team, other Postal Service
specialists (e.g., Finance or Legal Counsel) or external experts (care must be
taken to ensure that there are no organizational conflicts of interest if an
outside representative is selected). Individuals selected for the Proposal
Evaluation Team must have the proper skills and the ability to support the
evaluation. Each member will bring something unique to the team; his or her
individuality helps make the team process powerful. The most important
characteristics for consideration in member selection include:
• Availability, interest, and willingness to participate on the Proposal
Evaluation Team
• Chemistry with other team members
• Familiarity with all the different parts of the proposal evaluation
process (each part of the process must be known by at least one
team member)
• Skills
• Relevant organizational representation
Other important Proposal Evaluation Team formation issues are:
• Level and type of authority to grant the team
• Use of full-time versus part-time members
• Decisions about collocating team personnel
• Team effectiveness
• Team size (larger teams are generally more difficult to manage
and coordinate and can create role confusion among members)
The Contracting Officer is responsible for forming the Proposal Evaluation
Team and will work with the Purchase/SCM Team to identify internal and
external candidates. Depending on the complexity and importance of the
RFP, the Proposal Evaluation Team may comprise the writers of the RFP,
subject matter specialists, and outside consultants; it should include only
those members and functions that directly support the evaluation.
A Proposal Evaluation Team should include only those functions that are
critical to the support of the evaluation. Selected members from the
Purchase/SCM Team (including the Contracting Officer and others, if
warranted) make up the Proposal Evaluation Team. Non-Postal Service
members may be included on the Proposal Evaluation Team or as advisors if
Postal Service members are not available to fill the functions needed on the
team.
Other members of the Proposal Evaluation Team from the Postal Service
may include:
• Purchasing specialists, Pricing Analysts, and other specialists to
evaluate a proposal's price and cost aspects
• Engineers, architects, and technical specialists to make technical
judgments on the submitted proposals
Start Request for Proposals (RFP) Development topic, Develop Sourcing
Strategy task, Process Step 2: Evaluate Sources
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