Organizations expect the benefits of contract management software and contract compliance to accrue to them. Their procurement team will gain in efficiency, shorten turn-around time, and reduce costs. Their attorneys will focus on unreviewed, contract-specific terms in high-value agreements instead of checking and re-checking boilerplate language in routine contracts.
Even the hard-to-quantify reduction of risk that contract management software makes possible is viewed in company-centric terms: making sure that the actions and commitments the company makes carry limited risks that are well understood and manageable.
This focus on the internal processes and obligation management within one’s company often leaves unexamined the work and commitment of a company’s subcontractors. While subcontractors are vital in getting large projects done, it is important to stay on top of their work as well as their qualifications, insurance and documentation.
It can also seem like an overwhelming project.
Here are two questions that your organization should be able to answer quickly.
Is subcontracted work getting done?
At the most basic level, a company’s contract managers want to be sure that work is done before it is paid for. But this small detail has been known to slip when it is not any one person’s job to check. Sometimes overworked government agencies pay for services that are said to have been completed by the contracted company, who have themselves taken the word of the subcontractors. In construction projects, subcontractors may appear to have completed a job satisfactorily, but did so in a substandard way that comes to light later.
Contracts for recurring services – as when a government contracts for management of routine services or specialized ones such as managing prisons or traffic infrastructure – are open to this problem without careful management. An inspection on one occasion can show a service is being rendered by the subcontractor, but the contract’s obligation may be ongoing, calling for repeated inspections that never happen.
Another scenario: personnel levels, such as qualified staffing in a healthcare or correctional facility, may be required in the contract according to a certain formula (e.g., “no fewer than x persons with medical certification at or above level y, and an average staff level of z over a one-week period”). Is the subcontractor keeping a record of these staffing levels? Is the contractor?
The contractor faces risks when work is not getting done by the subcontractor:
Contract management software can help companies manage subcontracts in several ways.
The obligation tracking capabilities of contract management software is not limited to one’s own direct obligations; it can be used to successfully monitor the work that a company is relying on its subcontractors to complete. This helps projects stay on target, but more importantly, protects companies from risk.
Do personnel and practices meet the requirements of the contract?
While a contract may simply call for getting something done – something that the contractor turns to subcontractors to accomplish – it may require more than that.
Government contracts, in particular, may require that any employees under a subcontract:
In many cases it’s the contractor who is responsible for insuring that these things are in fact the case.
Health insurers often face a similar task with their health care providers, making certain each year that the providers’ licensing and inspections are up to date.
The contractor faces risks when qualifications are not met by the subcontractor:
Contract management software can help companies keep subcontractor records up to date in several ways:
The job of keeping subcontractors in compliance with contract terms can be accomplished for dozens or hundreds of subcontractors, not with endless person-hours, but with thoughtfully deployed technology.
Every contractual relationship, ideally, should benefit and protect both parties. Subcontracts should do the same – and they can when managed with the help of contract management software.