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Shared Services Canada Procurement – A Reflection on 2012-13 and the Way Forward

Shared Services Canada Procurement – A Reflection on 2012-13 and the Way Forward . Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC) Executive Briefing Series Gina Rallis, Senior Assistant Deputy Minister and CFO Corporate Services Branch May 21 st , 2013. Objective and Context.

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Shared Services Canada Procurement – A Reflection on 2012-13 and the Way Forward

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  1. Shared Services CanadaProcurement – A Reflection on 2012-13 and the Way Forward Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC) Executive Briefing Series Gina Rallis, Senior Assistant Deputy Minister and CFO Corporate Services Branch May 21st , 2013

  2. Objective and Context Objectives • To provide a summary of SSC’s procurement year for 2012-13 • To provide an overview of SSC’s plans to support transformation agenda through procurement Context • Current state procurement environment SSC • Spend analysis • Procurement Planning at SSC • Engagement: Information Technology Infrastructure Roundtable • Update on Procurement Instruments • Procurement of End User Devices • Next Steps

  3. SSC’s procurement environment • Over the past 12 months we have: • Obtained legislative authorities • Sought approval of increased procurement limits • Undertaken a procurement health check for SSC • Supported the transformation agenda and enabled email transformation • Absorbed contracts and commitments from over 43 partners • 5,025 contracts • 3,000 individual commitments • $1.05 billion in total contracted value • Started to plot out our future state for: • Planning • Governance • Policy • Strategic engagement and • Acquisition strategies

  4. SSC Contracted Spend Analysis – FY2012-13 • Breakdown of SSC’s procurement spend by commodities (right) • Contracts for Telecommunication Services represent SSC’s largest category of contracted spend

  5. SSC Contracted Spend Analysis – FY2012-13 Cont’d.

  6. Procurement Planning at SSC • Getting our arms around what we have procured and what we need to procure will take time • Working towards a departmental procurement plan that integrates into: • The Departmental Investment Plan • Integrated Planning across the department and aligns to DPR, RPP and PAA • Collecting requirements based on historical spend from across business lines and validating which transactions will need “treatment” over the next 6,9 and 12 months • Working towards a 3 year plan with annual refresh • Integrating the results into the established SSC governance – Procurement Review Board and Senior Project and Procurement Oversight Committee • Possible release – Summer 2013

  7. Engagement : Information Technology Infrastructure Roundtable (ITIR) Procurement Benchmarks Advisory Committee • SSC has established an advisory committee to support the ITIR on matters related to procurement practices • The committee is chaired by SSC Sr. ADM, Corporate Services and CFO, with the Assistant Comptroller General, Acquired Services and Assets, from the Treasury Board Secretariat as vice-chair • Committee membership includes officials from SSC, PWGSC, and industry representatives from the information and communications technology sector • Specifically, the committee has been established to contribute to the improvement of the execution of government-wide procurement and has been established with the belief that business outcomes need to drive procurement activity. • SSC has committed to adopt best practices with respect to focussing on outcomes and avoiding over-prescriptive specifications for all its procurement needs.

  8. Engagement : Information Technology Infrastructure Roundtable (ITIR) Cont’d Smart Sourcing Advisory Committee • SSC has established an advisory committee to support the ITIR on matters related to sourcing decisions • The committee is co-chaired by SSC Sr. ADM, Corporate Services and CFO and SSC. Sr. ADM, Transformation, Service Strategy and Design • Committee membership includes officials from SSC, PWGSC, and industry representatives from the information and communications technology sector • The committee supports the ITIR by considering the ways in which the ICT sector can better position itself for potential opportunities to work with SSC. • The committee provides advice on the potential sourcing models that SSC will pursue for delivery of its mandate and assists in outlining the core functions and skills sets for the delivery of the Government of Canada’s IT infrastructure.

  9. Engagement : Information Technology Infrastructure Roundtable (ITIR) Cont’d Innovative Canadian Enterprises Committee • discuss current barriers to innovation within the Canadian Information and Communications Technology (ICT) sector, and provide strategic and tactical advice to the IT Infrastructure Roundtable (ITIR) on what Shared Services Canada (SSC) can do to accelerate innovation and commercialization in the Canadian ICT sector. • Chaired by the Head of Analytics for Shared Services Canada and co-chaired by the Director General Information and Communications Technology Branch from Industry Canada

  10. Engagement : Information Technology Infrastructure Roundtable (ITIR) Cont’d Architecture Framework Advisory Committee • Chaired by the Senior ADM Transformation, Service Strategy and Design and is vice-chaired by the Chief Technology Officer for the Government of Canada. • Explores and weighs options and makes recommendations through SSC on all aspects of enterprise architecture as it relates to SSC’s transformation initiatives, in particular email data centers and networks/telecommunications

  11. Update on Procurement Instruments

  12. Procurement of End User Devices (EUD) • Departments are to continue to procure EUD Hardware and Software off of existing methods of supply (where available) or through traditional contract entry limits contained within their own authority or that of PWGSC • PWGSC will process requirements that exceed the call-up limits of departments or contracts above the contract entry limits as designated by the Treasury Board Contracting Policy • This process will be complimented with the implementation of a review process for EUD software requirements, and a subsequent process for EUD hardware requirements • This approach will ensure ‘business as usual’ for departments and suppliers until SSC develops an EUD transformation strategies

  13. Next Steps • Continue with departmental procurement planning exercise by validating data with business lines and looking across the department for consolidation opportunities • Leveraging information to support category management strategies, define categories and build governance • Acquire and deploy procure to pay system to input, manage, track and execute procurements contained in the procurement plan • Build digital catalogues where possible and enable tiered procurement to ensure maximum flexibility for business partners • Develop procurement strategies in partnership with business lines and assist them to engage industry in a timely manner • Continue to compete requirements in an open, fair and transparent manner and support the transformation agenda.

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