Contract Types

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Revision as of 17:37, May 11, 2025 by Pinfold (talk | contribs) (Created page with "__NOTOC__ =Types of Contracts Used in Technology Procurement= ==Overview== This page outlines contract types commonly used in technology procurement, especially by federal, state, and local governments in the United States. It includes descriptions, performance assurance methods, vendor lock-in tendencies, and suitability for agile projects. ==Contract Types== ===1. Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ)=== '''Description''': IDIQ contracts are used when the...")
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Types of Contracts Used in Technology Procurement

Overview

This page outlines contract types commonly used in technology procurement, especially by federal, state, and local governments in the United States. It includes descriptions, performance assurance methods, vendor lock-in tendencies, and suitability for agile projects.

Contract Types

1. Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ)

Description: IDIQ contracts are used when the exact quantity of goods or services is unknown. They define a ceiling and set minimum/maximum quantities.

Performance Assurance:

  • Task/delivery orders define metrics
  • SLAs are included
  • Performance reviewed per order

Vendor Lock-in:

  • Moderate to high with single vendor
  • Lower with multi-award IDIQs (task order competition)

Agile Suitability:

  • Good fit with multi-vendor, flexible task orders
  • Supports iterative and evolving work

2. Blanket Purchase Agreements (BPA)

Description: Simplified method to fulfill recurring needs through pre-arranged "accounts" with vendors.

Performance Assurance:

  • Deliverables/metrics specified per order
  • Periodic vendor performance reviews

Vendor Lock-in:

  • Moderate, higher with single-award BPAs
  • Lower with multi-award flexibility

Agile Suitability:

  • Suitable for short-term, iterative agile orders
  • Aligns well with agile sprint structures

3. Standing Offers

Description: Pre-arranged terms/pricing with one or more vendors for recurring needs. Common in Canada; sometimes used by U.S. cities.

Performance Assurance:

  • Managed at the call-up level
  • Periodic review by buyer

Vendor Lock-in:

  • Moderate; mitigated with multiple vendors
  • Price competition possible per order

Agile Suitability:

  • Adaptable to agile with flexible call-ups
  • Requires agile-savvy management

4. Time and Materials (T&M)

Description: Vendor is paid for time and materials used. Useful when scope is uncertain.

Performance Assurance:

  • Requires tight oversight and time tracking
  • Often capped or milestone-billed

Vendor Lock-in:

  • High if vendor accumulates system knowledge or uses proprietary tools
  • Reduced by knowledge transfer clauses

Agile Suitability:

  • Excellent fit—ideal for evolving, iterative agile work

5. Fixed-Price Contracts (Firm-Fixed Price or FFP)

Description: Vendor delivers a defined scope for a fixed price.

Performance Assurance:

  • Based on milestones or deliverables
  • Strong contractual enforcement

Vendor Lock-in:

  • Low with well-defined, portable outputs
  • Higher if tied to proprietary tech

Agile Suitability:

  • Poor fit unless broken into small, iterative contracts
  • Inhibits scope flexibility

6. Cost-Reimbursement Contracts (Cost-Plus)

Description: Government reimburses allowable costs plus a fee. Used in R&D or high-risk projects.

Performance Assurance:

  • Requires audits and cost justification
  • May include performance incentives

Vendor Lock-in:

  • High due to IP dependency or accumulated knowledge
  • Mitigated with IP clauses and transition plans

Agile Suitability:

  • Good for R&D and early agile stages
  • Less suited for scaled delivery

7. Multiple Award Schedules (MAS) / GSA Schedules

Description: Pre-qualified vendor schedules negotiated with the GSA. Agencies issue orders under the schedule.

Performance Assurance:

  • Each order may include deliverables and SLAs
  • Performance can be reviewed annually

Vendor Lock-in:

  • Low if multiple vendors are on schedule
  • Easy vendor switching supports flexibility

Agile Suitability:

  • Works well with modular agile projects
  • Supports iterative contracting

8. Managed Services Agreements

Description: Vendor manages a service (e.g., IT, cloud) under a long-term agreement.

Performance Assurance:

  • SLAs, uptime requirements, incident metrics
  • Penalties/incentives tied to performance

Vendor Lock-in:

  • High, especially with proprietary systems
  • Requires strong transition clauses

Agile Suitability:

  • Weak unless vendor uses agile service delivery
  • Better for stable, ongoing services

Summary Table

Comparison of Contract Types
Contract Type Performance Assurance Vendor Lock-In Risk Agile Project Fit
IDIQ Per task order, SLAs Moderate Good (multi-award best)
BPA Per order, cumulative Moderate Good
Standing Offer Per call-up Moderate Fairly Good
T&M Time tracking, oversight High Excellent
Fixed-Price (FFP) Milestones, penalties Low-Moderate Poor
Cost-Reimbursement Audits, reporting High Good (early stage)
MAS / GSA Schedules Per order Low-Moderate Good
Managed Services SLAs, penalties High Poor-Fair