Purpose
Note on JCT editions: JCT has published the 2024 Edition. This guidance cites JCT SBC/Q 2016 clause references; the commercial and payment mechanisms are substantively unchanged in the 2024 edition, but specific clause references should be verified against the contract edition in use on any given project.
The procurement strategy must be finalised at RIBA Stage 3 Spatial Coordination. Delaying this decision to Stage 4 compresses the pre-tender period, restricts the available routes, and may force a sub-optimal choice under programme pressure. The QS advises the client on the most appropriate procurement route, contract form and tendering method, having regard to the project's programme, cost certainty requirements, design responsibility, client sophistication, and risk allocation preferences — all of which are substantially clearer at Stage 3 than at earlier stages.
The procurement decision fundamentally affects the allocation of risk between the client and contractor. Under traditional procurement (JCT SBC/Q), the client retains design risk and achieves price certainty only at tender; under Design and Build (JCT DB 2016), design risk transfers to the contractor at an earlier stage, typically at a cost premium. NEC4 contracts offer an alliance/collaborative approach with options spanning lump sum (Option A) to cost reimbursement (Option E). Each route has materially different implications for the QS's ongoing role.
RICS Management of Risk (1st edition, 2020) explicitly addresses the relationship between procurement route and risk allocation, confirming that the selection of procurement strategy is itself a risk management decision. The Stage 3 Risk Register informs this choice: a project with high residual design risk is poorly suited to a fixed-price D&B arrangement; one with stable, well-defined design is poorly suited to cost-reimbursement contracting.
Key Principles
- RICS Tendering Strategies (RICS guidance note, 1st edition, 2014): guidance on selecting and implementing tendering strategies across all main procurement routes; covers single-stage, two-stage, negotiated and framework approaches.
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q, 2016 edition): the principal traditional procurement contract for building works in England and Wales; design responsibility rests with the client's design team.
- JCT Design and Build Contract (DB, 2016 edition): transfers design responsibility and price risk to the contractor following the Employer's Requirements; typically used where early price certainty is the client's primary objective.
- NEC4 Engineering and Construction Contract (2017): suite of contracts covering Options A–F (lump sum, remeasured, cost reimbursable, target cost, management contract, PSC); widely used in public sector and infrastructure.
- RICS Management of Risk (1st edition, 2020): Section 2.3 — Procurement routes and risk: confirms the relationship between contract type and risk transfer; identifies the QS's role in advising on risk allocation under each route.
- Public Contracts Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/102): mandatory procurement rules for contracting authorities above EU threshold values (works: £5.372m as of 2024); defines open, restricted, competitive dialogue and competitive procedure with negotiation.
- Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 (CDM 2015): the Principal Contractor must be appointed before construction phase commences; procurement strategy must allow sufficient time for pre-construction CDM compliance.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Deferring the procurement decision to Stage 4 — this compresses the tender programme, restricts route options, and may prevent proper pre-qualification, OJEU notification (if applicable) or two-stage tendering from being properly implemented.
- Recommending D&B on a project with significant outstanding design risk — transferring design responsibility to a contractor before the design is sufficiently developed results in loss of specification control, disputes over Employer's Requirements interpretation, and contractor-driven value engineering post-contract.
- Failing to consider public procurement regulations — for public sector clients above threshold, the open, restricted or competitive dialogue procedure must be followed; failure to comply can result in mandatory standstill periods, challenge, and procurement restart.
- Selecting a contract form without advising on the implications for the QS's post-contract role — the client must understand that a D&B contract substantially reduces the QS's cost management role unless a specific post-contract QS scope is agreed.
- Confusing management contracting (contractor manages domestic subcontractors for a fee; client holds subcontracts) with construction management (client holds all trade contracts directly; CM provides coordination only) — the risk and cost implications are materially different.
- Not aligning CDM Principal Contractor appointment with the procurement programme — CDM 2015 requires the Principal Contractor to be appointed before the construction phase commences; a compressed procurement programme must still allow time for this legal obligation to be met.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
APC Competencies: Procurement & Tendering (L2) | Cost Management (L2) | Legal & Regulatory Compliance (L1) | Programming & Planning (L1)
Procurement Strategy Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Assess the suitability of traditional, Design and Build, management and NEC4 procurement routes against a client's time, cost certainty, design responsibility and quality objectives, and produce a documented Procurement Strategy Report.
- Explain the risk allocation implications of different procurement routes using the RICS Management of Risk framework, and identify how the Stage 3 Risk Register informs the procurement strategy recommendation.
- Identify the application of the Public Contracts Regulations 2015 to public sector clients, and advise on the appropriate tendering procedure (open, restricted, competitive dialogue) relative to contract value thresholds.
Further Reading
- RICS Tendering Strategies (RICS guidance note, 1st edition, 2014, RICS Books)
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q, 2016 edition, Sweet & Maxwell)
- JCT Design and Build Contract (DB, 2016 edition, Sweet & Maxwell)
- NEC4 Engineering and Construction Contract (2017, Thomas Telford)
- Public Contracts Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/102, HMSO)
- RICS Management of Risk (1st edition, 2020, RICS Books) — Section 2.3
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