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Part 3. An RFP for Consulting Services
An agency seeking consulting services should prepare the RFP with great care.
The RFP is at once the calling card, the resume, the annual report, and the
marketing brochure of the agency. Consultants will decide whether to draft a
proposal for a particular project based in significant part on the RFP. That
RFP should present the community, the agency, and the proposed project accurately
and well. Consultants pay a great deal of attention to the way their proposals
are written because they have a lot on the line; agencies should pay equal attention
to the writing of RFPs. Books and seminars on proposal writing are widely available.
In comparison, the RFP is a neglected literary form.
The Purpose of an RFP
Among the purposes of an RFP are eliciting proposals from suitable candidates
and, when the RFP is not preceded by a review of qualifications, discouraging
responses from those who lack the necessary qualifications. To that extent,
the RFP resembles an ordinary help-wanted ad. However, since the audience for
an RFP should be well screened in advance, these are not major concerns. A good
RFP is, above all, one that engages the interest of the consultant and elicits
creative approaches to the problem. Once the RFP has stimulated the consultant's
interest, the firm is a lot more likely to risk investing in a proposal.
A well-written RFP accurately conveys the full scope of the work desired, thereby
enabling the consultant to address the project precisely and to make realistic
cost estimates. In addition, the wording of an RFP should enable principals
of a consulting firm to recognize whether the firm will be a serious contender
for the job, thereby sparing the firm the expense of a useless proposal and
sparing the agency the trouble of reading and responding to that proposal.
What the RFP Should Include
An RFP may be accompanied by appendices, maps, drawings, and other backup material.
However, the RFP itself should be a relatively brief document. Even on a rather
large or complex project, the various elements can generally be covered in 10
to 25 single-spaced pages.
Cover Sheet
A lengthy RFP should have a cover sheet giving the RFP title, the project or
program title, the name of the issuing entity, and the date the proposal is
due.
Introduction
The introduction should identify and describe, in no more than a paragraph,
the project or program for which the consultant is required and its current
status. It should then state briefly the nature of the consulting assistance
being sought. This should be carefully worded. If the job requires an interdisciplinary
team, it is best to talk about the end product or type of activity (e.g., an
environmental impact assessment or a development plan), rather than a specific
type of firm. Your preferences about the type of firm can be better explained
later, in the qualifications section. The introduction should also state the
amount budgeted for the proposed work. Finally, the due date for the proposal
should also be included in the introduction, with a reference to the directions
for submission that will be described later in the RFP.
Describe the issuing agency and its relationship to other entities if that
is not obvious. This suggestion is not necessary for a planning department that
is clearly a line agency within a municipal government. However, it can be very
important for intergovernmental agencies and other entities. Names of public
authorities and special districts, such as sewer districts, can be particularly
misleading. Such an entity is often named after a city, town, or county with
which the agency may or may not be coterminous. The difference should be pointed
out, though it need not be explained in detail in the introduction.
Description of the Project or Program
This section should establish the context for the work to be performed and help
the consultant to judge the level of effort required for various tasks. If the
project or program is very complex, the details can be relegated to an appendix
or other attachments. The important points to cover here are:
1. the purpose of the project or program (what it is supposed to accomplish
and for whom);
2. its basic components--management, structure, processes, and personnel;
3. any innovative or unusual aspects;
4. the site(s) or geographic area(s) involved; and
5. a proposed schedule and present status of the project or program.
Description of Services Required
This is the heart of the RFP. Take great care with it because this is the section
the consultants will read again and again, weighing its every nuance. If carelessly
written, this section can defeat the purpose of the RFP by misstating the agency's
needs or by conveying inaccurate signals about how the proposals will be evaluated.
Write clearly. Avoid jargon. Use commonly understood terms, rather than acronyms
or abbreviations. Do not use general terms like "facilities" if you
mean "roads."
Emphasize what the agency needs from the consultant. Although the RFP should
certainly identify any critical or mandatory steps in the process, such as public
meetings, the proposal process often works best if it leaves the work program
open to suggestions from proposing consultants. Unless the purpose for hiring
the consultant is simply to augment staff on a project, the same expertise that
the consultant brings to the substantive aspects of the project should enable
the consultant to develop a responsive work program. There are two reasons for
encouraging consultants to do so. First, if the consultant has significant experience
with the type of work involved, the consultant's personnel should know more
about what should be in such a work program than the agency staff. Second, evaluating
independently developed work programs is an excellent way to evaluate a consultant's
understanding of the project and approach to the project, as well as the quality
of the consultant's work.
This section should also provide a schedule for the completion of the project
and identification of major project milestones. If there are a particular number
of public meetings involved in the project or if the goal is to have a report
or plan ready for a meeting that has already been scheduled, that information
should be included in this section of the RFP.
Amount Budgeted
Most agencies do not include budget information in an RFP. The theory of agencies
in withholding budget information is that consultants who know what the budget
is will automatically submit proposals that "spend the budget." That
may be a legitimate concern. On the other hand, a consultant with no idea of
the budget for a proposed project may have great difficulty in submitting a
responsive proposal. Where an agency fails to specify a budget, cost proposals
may range up to a high of four or five times the lowest-cost proposal. In those
circumstances, there may be only one or two proposals that are within the project
budget of the local government and thus only one or two proposals from which
to make a choice. A proposal that falls far below the anticipated budget will
probably include far less in the way of services than the agency wants or needs.
It is very difficult to compare proposals with extreme variations in budget,
because there are too many variables. If two qualified firms offer exactly the
same range of services at significantly different prices, the agency has something
to compare. If two qualified firms offer vastly different scopes of services
at the same price, the agency can select the scope of services that best suits
its needs. However, when there is little in common among proposals from qualified
firms, comparison is difficult indeed.
There are few disadvantages to sharing budget information. The agency that
publishes the budget can still rank proposals competitively based on which qualified
consultant will provide the best value--the most appropriate package of services
within the agency's budget. If an agency's expectations of services far exceed
its proposed budget, it is easier on all parties if consultants are aware of
that discrepancy initially and can inform the agency of that fact without putting
the consultants or the agency through the demanding process of preparing and
reviewing proposals. If an agency's budget exceeds its expectations (a very
rare circumstance indeed), one or more reputable firms will bid less than the
budget or offer a range of additional and perhaps unneeded services. The agency
can then select one of the lower-priced proposals or negotiate a reduced contract
for less than the full scope of services proposed by the selected firm.
An agency can maintain some price competition in the process and still provide
guidance to consultants by publishing a budget range. However, the real issue
in selecting a consultant is not price but value. If every consultant competing
for a proposed project submits a budget for exactly the same amount, the agency
can easily compare the proposals to determine which offers the best value. That
is a far more practical exercise than attempting to compare diverse proposals
with vastly different budgets, hoping to renegotiate one of the proposals to
the appropriate level of services for the budget.
Type of Contract
Indicate what type of contractual arrangement the agency will use. Professional
services contracts generally fall into one of two categories: fixed-price (also
called lump sum), in which the agency receives a defined scope of services for
a fixed price; and time-and-expense (also called cost-plus), in which the agency
reimburses a consultant on a fixed formula for professional time and expenses.
The advantages and disadvantages of the two types of contracts are discussed
in more depth in the section on "Legal Considerations and Insurance"
at this site.
Qualifications
An agency that uses the two-part, RFQ/RFP process will have most of the information
about qualifications that it needs from the RFQs. At the RFP stage, it should
ask for an update to the RFQ if there has been a significant lapse of time between
the two. The agency will also want one additional set of information. The proposal
should specify what personnel will work on the project. It should also include
short resumes on those specific individuals, if those resumes were not included
in the RFQ.
An agency that goes directly to the RFP stage should include a full request
for qualifications as part of the proposal. That should include the same information
suggested in Chapter 2 for a statement of qualifications, plus the specific
qualifications of any personnel to be assigned to the project.
The RFP need not be very specific when requesting information on consultant
qualifications. A firm that submits a standard brochure unrelated to the proposed
project without other information probably will not give the project the attention
that it needs and does not deserve serious consideration.
Evaluation Criteria
Explain how the proposals will be evaluated and, in general terms, by whom.
It is helpful to both parties if the consultants know how much weight will be
given to specific aspects of their proposals, such as cost, technical approach,
relevant experience, qualifications of the project team, familiarity with the
geographic area, and logistical capabilities. It is also useful to let the consultants
know what type of group will review the proposals. A consultant may prepare
a proposal in one way if the planning commission is to make the selection and
in a very different way if technical experts from the staff will make the selection.
Some consultants will probably learn who is on the selection team. Disclosing
that information in the RFP keeps the process fair to all. If state law or local
rule prohibits the consultants from contacting selection team members directly,
the RFP should say so and selection team members should be clearly instructed
to turn away (and probably report) any attempted contacts from consultants.
Planning consultants typically do not attempt to lobby selection committee members,
but some do. If there are rules on the subject, they should be stated clearly.
Directions for Submission
The RFP should include a simple statement of the time (date and hour) and place
for submission of the proposal and the number of copies required. Since proposals
are often delivered by messenger or overnight delivery service, give a street
address (with office number) as well as the agency's mailing address. If there
are sealed-bid requirements or if cost proposals should be submitted separately,
those directions should be contained in this section.
This material is a revised and edited excerpt from Selecting and Retaining
a Planning Consultant: RFPs, RFQs, Contracts, and Project Management by Eric
Damian Kelly, AICP. It is Planning Advisory Service Report No. 443, published
by the American Planning Association, February 1993.
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