Editorial: Assisting acquisitions
GSA's assisted services business is too important to let fail. Here are three steps to make it work.
The idea behind the General Services Administrations Assisted Acquisition Services Office makes sense. Essentially, the office provides the procurement version of a shared service. Its easy to imagine it becoming one of the busiest parts of the agency. After all, the number of people working in procurement and acquisition has plummeted in the past decade. In contrast, government spending on contracts has risen.
Almost everybody says agencies dont have the procurement and acquisition staff to get everything done, let alone get it all done well. Furthermore, agencies face a more challenging procurement environment these days as they increasingly move beyond straightforward technology buys to focus on more complex solutions.
GSA does have a seasoned, knowledgeable procurement workforce that can design procurements to help programs succeed.
The problem for GSAs assisted services is that theory has not translated to reality.
There are many reasons for that. There was a combination of previous mismanagement paired with a series of problems that culminated in the Get It Right campaign. Unfortunately, in hindsight, Get It Right got it wrong. It resulted in a GSA procurement operation that was more focused on itself rather than on the needs and concerns of its customers.
In addition, the merger of GSAs two acquisition arms took far too long, confusing GSAs customers and further distracting GSAs procurement and acquisition personnel. All of that resulted in plummeting business for assisted services.
We are not naive. We understand this business is troubled, and we understand that there are legitimate reasons why. But it is time to move beyond past troubles. The success of GSAs assisted services is important to good government. Both agencies and contractors need this business to be successful.
Here are three recommended steps:
- GSA needs to make an all-out marketing effort for its assisted services. Start by changing the name. In this time of tight budgets, agencies cant afford assistance. They need an organization that can help them get their work done. We would recommend the name Governmentwide Procurement.
- As part of GSAs marketing effort, it needs to offer agencies steep discounts on management fees temporarily to bring back customers. And market that by saying that GSA is so convinced that the work is worth 4 percent, were willing to offer these discounts to show customers what we can do for them.
- Agencies need to move beyond their in-house bias and fixation on GSAs management fee. That fee is tiny compared with the cost of failed projects.
Christopher J. Dorobek