Commercial buyers of information technology products and services are
locked into a self-defeating pattern of behavior when it comes to
negotiating contract terms and conditions with technology vendors, and
it is time to move on to a better approach. Better technology vendor
negotiations produce better contracts for a technology project, and
better contracts produce better project outcomes. So, break the mold and
move on to a better way of negotiating contract terms and conditions
for your next technology project.
Vendor Contracts - Timing Is Everything
Let
us assume that by now you have done a lot of planning and information
gathering for your proposed technology project, you have completed a
vendor selection process, and now it is time to document your deal with
your chosen vendor.
At this stage in the technology procurement
process, the most common practice-indeed the almost-universal
practice-is to distribute the vendor's proposed contracts to your
project team for review and comment. Then, as if by instinct, everyone
starts looking for vendor bias in the contracts. No one has been given
this specific directive. You simply assume and expect that everyone
knows the drill. Folks on your project team begin striking certain
biased provisions and scribbling notes about amending others. For sure,
removing or limiting vendor bias in the contracts is a worthwhile
exercise, but now is not the time to perform this exercise.
Light bulb on
I
had to get several technology deals under my belt before I realized
this, but at this early stage of the contracting process, you really
need to focus first on terms and conditions that are important to you,
not the terms and conditions that are important to your vendor. We know
your vendor has included in its specimen contracts (as modified prior to
presentation to you) all the terms and conditions of your deal that are
important to your vendor. In fact, they are very easy to identify. They
are all the contract terms with vendor bias. These provisions are so
important to your vendor that it has purposely added bias to them, often
with obvious exaggeration and redundancy. Even if your vendor has to
bargain down somewhat from these provisions, your vendor is still in a
safe position because the starting point was so extreme.
What you should do instead
At
this initial stage of contracting, you should ignore your vendor's
proposed contracts. Simply set them aside for the time being, and do
this for two reasons.
First, in order to express in writing the
terms and conditions that are most important to you, you must actually
think of what those terms and conditions might be. Likeable as your
vendor may be, your vendor will not have already added to its proposed
contracts the terms and conditions most important to you for your
particular project. You will have to come up with this stuff on your
own.
Second, until you know what terms and conditions are most
important to you for your particular project, you are in no position to
challenge your vendor's biased provisions except in attempt to remove or
limit the bias. "I don't know exactly what impact this provision has on
our project, but I know it's not a provision that helps our cause."
Challenging these provisions in a vacuum does not really help you.
The big picture
Now
is the time to start with a fresh, big-picture perspective, and then
fill in lots of detail. Circle back to earlier stages of your
procurement process and revisit your decisions, your assumptions, and
the various things you have learned. As a result of your many meetings
and discussions, there may be things that you are now taking for
granted: special vendor qualifications, how a particular piece of your
project will be orchestrated, acutely risky aspects of your project, and
so on. Bring to mind other similar projects within your organization
and apply what you learned from those experiences.
Re-acquainting
yourself with prior thought processes, discoveries, assumptions, and
experiences will help you remember aspects of your project that you
previously deemed important-whether because they are critical to project
success, they pose a substantial risk within your project, or perhaps
both-and it will force you to consider the importance of other elements
for the first time. This process will help you build out the terms and
conditions for your deal that benefit and protect you, terms and
conditions that maximize the probability of project success and minimize
project risk.
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