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Commodity vs Value-Added Contractor Services

Publication No
RS205-1
Type
Checklist/Flowchart/Matrix
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2006
Pages
46
Research Team
RT-205
DOCUMENT DETAILS
Abstract
Key Findings
Filters & Tags
Abstract

The engineering and construction industry continues to grapple with the issue of “value-added services.” Are such services really value added or are they simply commodities to be purchased on the open market under competitive bidding procedures? A primary problem is the fact that owners and contactors use different terminologies and definitions when discussing this controversial issue. As a result, both parties often become frustrated with each other. Because of the varying definitions used by industry practitioners, miscommunication not only occurs between owner and contractor, but also within their own organizations.

As a way to overcome this communication barrier and to achieve an objective basis to conduct a detailed study, CII established the Commodity vs. Value-Added Contractor Services Research Team to develop a set of common definitions. The effort by the research team includes the following terms:

  • Value – benefits provided (used with modifiers such as market value, perceived value).
  • Value-added – marginal increase in value created by features or functions of a good or service.
  • Net value-added – value in relation to its associated cost.
  • Differentiation – dissimilarity of the features and functions of a good or service.
  • Commodity – undifferentiated good or service.

Once the common definitions were established, the research team conducted a series of workshops with the two targeted groups isolated from each other. Although some criticism of the other side occurred during these workshops, comments during breaks tended to be similar to this quote from a contractor:

“We are often are own worst enemy and force the owners to treat us as a commodity.”

A quote from an owner also is similar:

“We do not do a good job of articulating what features and functions provide benefits and thus the bid process is both vague and ambiguous for contractors.”

Following the workshops, the research team conducted a case study of a number of projects at one company and then analyzed data from a large number of projects from both owner and contractor pairs to identify which offerings in the bid really added value and which did not.

The results are surprising in that many services believed relatively important by contractors in making project proposals are not viewed as important by the owners evaluating the bids. The converse holds true in that some relatively important criteria from the owner’s perspective are not viewed with the same importance by the contractor.

Three of the most important conclusions drawn by the team from its study are:

  • The industry needs to use common definitions.
  • Contractors and owners should be aware that many service offerings relate to value-added; however, only a select few actually contribute to net value-added.
  • The more the owner emphasizes price as the deciding factor, the less net value-added is actually realized.

The team also concludes that value can only be measured from an owner’s perspective. And, just as important, if owners are buying on price, they are missing net value-added. An overview of these problems and some possible solutions are discussed in the following chapters.

Key Findings
Precisely-defined terms should be used to help aid understanding. RT-205 defined 25 terms for use in the study, with that for “differentiation” being key for clarity amongst both the team and industry participants in the study. (RS205-1, p. 7 and Appendix A)

 
Workshop data showed that the industry frequently suffers from a major “disconnect” between various stakeholders, with a “translation barrier” blocking useful dialogue between owners and contractors on the topic of value-added services. Owners are frequently unable to articulate their specifications and needs to contractors, and then to receive a clear response back about net value-adding services. However, useful dialogue can be achieved. (RS205-1, p. 9)
The research team captured 80 potential differentiators and used owner, contractor individual and “paired” (input from both owner and contractor) projects to test for alignment and actual net “value-added.” While owners and contractors generally agreed on the general list of differentiators and the most important of them, they had markedly different views on which would provide the most net value-added. (RS205-1, p. 17)

The research defined 12 categories of differentiators and identified several key differentiators which are statistically linked to net value-added. These fall under seven of the 12 categories:

  1. Risk Management
  2. Facility Operating Performance
  3. Customer Relations
  4. Safety
  5. Financial Considerations
  6. Delivery Methodology
  7. Quality Management

The team additionally identified differentiators that actually detract from net value-added, both at the pre-qualification and the final bidding stages.

(RS205-1, pp. 30-31)
 A revised value-added contracting model can be used as a guide to the differentiators that achieve the greatest net value-added for owners, and hence can help contractors win contracts.

RS205-1, Communication and Evaluation Tool

This tool can be used by both owners and contractors. For example, owners can use the tool to: (Appendix B)

  1. Identify and communicate the primary functional capabilities they are seeking from their contractors, along with importance weighting.
  2. Compare their assessment of the contractor’s capabilities vs. the contractor’s self-assessment. Significant differences can be used to guide in-depth assessment and communication.
Filters & Tags
Project Phase
Research Topic
Commodity vs Value-Added Contractor Services
Keywords
Value-Added, Commodity, Differentiator, Services, Translation Barrier, Alignment, rt205