PSBJ November 2021

Page 26

TALKING POINT

THE CONSTRUCTION PLAYBOOK Published in December of last year, the Government’s Construction Playbook aims to encourage collaboration and better strategic relationships between the public and private sectors and to drive improvement and innovation within the construction industry. John Welch, Deputy Director for Crown Commercial Service, explains further. result of deep T heengagement with stakeholders across the UK’s construction industry, the Construction Playbook captures commercial best practices and specific sector reforms, setting out the Government’s expectations of how contracting authorities and suppliers, including the supply chain, should engage with each other from the start of any programme. Crown Commercial Service (CCS), an executive agency of the Cabinet Office, is the UK’s largest public procurement organisation. Our procurement professionals include experts in construction, facilities and estates management, building materials, energy, water and fuels, as well as dozens of other categories across all the common goods and services procured by the public sector.

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Having led the drafting process – covering early supplier engagement, outcomebased specifications, effective contracting, risk management, long-term planning and the overall procurement process – CCS continues to be part of the steering group supporting and overseeing the Construction Playbook’s implementation.

What the Construction Playbook says The Construction Playbook sets out 14 key policies for how the Government should assess, procure and deliver public works projects and programmes, to enable the UK to build back better. All central Government departments and their armslength bodies are expected to follow these policies on a ‘comply or explain’ basis – if

necessary, explaining why their unique circumstances mean they go their own way. The playbook sets out what is expected from the industry, including continuous improvement in building and workplace safety, cost, speed and quality of delivery, greater sharing of better data, investment in training the future workforce through upskilling and apprenticeships, and adoption of the UK Building Information Management (BIM) framework – providing greater certainty to construction through long-term plans for key programmes. It also puts the onus on the public sector to develop detailed project pipelines, considering alliance arrangements and earlier and more detailed market engagement, and building its own expertise around consistent, effective contracting.

John Welch is a senior commercial and procurement professional, chartered with extensive construction experience. He was recently appointed Chair of the NEC Users’ Group and is currently responsible for the strategic delivery of multi-billion-pound commercial agreements in Crown Commercial Service (CCS), supporting Government departments in delivering their construction programmes.

How to build the playbook into your procurement process Here are four ways you can ensure your construction procurements are in line with the recommendations of the Construction Playbook:

1. Put enough resource into planning The planning stage of any procurement will determine its success or otherwise. Make sure you assess the health and capability of your supply market, plan long term to drive value for your key assets and engage early with your supply chains.


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