One problem with qualification based contracting is that it discourages new firms from starting up and bidding on your work. If the firm track record is an issue and a new firm has no track record then where will theses new forms get a track record?
It’s the same problem in qualification based selection of engineering consultants as well.
The system is wide open to exploitation. Companies and especially government agencies can satisfy the rules of having some sort of competition for contractors and still get to pick the one that they want in the first place; it only allows them to pad the bill a lot.
In my mind the best method is to only invite bids from companies that can do the work. In the case of new companies take into account the resumes of the key players and not only the company track record and then have a price based competition from no more than 5 qualified companies.
Remember that bidding costs companies’ money, A bid competition with more than 5 companies becomes a turkey shoot where the guy who misses the most gets the job. Fewer that 3 bidders can result in collusion between bidders or inadequate price based competition. More than 5 bidders and the odds of any one bidder getting the job goes down and so does the level of attention that they place on the bid so you may not end up with a fair price.
Do it in two stages and not in a two envelop system. Unlike engineering proposals where the pricing is easy after the method and manpower is outlined in construction costing the bulk of the work is in getting the prices form suppliers and compiling them into a bid. The company history and qualifications is an easy part of the bid, most large firms have the package on the shelf. In smaller markets any good construction manager will know the names of the companies he/she wants and most likely have the principal’s names and numbers handy.
Sometimes a low bid price can cost you money because nothing is more expensive than having to change contractors mid stream due to a bankruptcy. The lost opportunity costs of the delay can be more than the construction costs alone.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion