Procurement Exit Plan How to Prepare

These are normally covered in a standard terms and conditions. However you should consider how services should continue after the contract ends, for whatever reason, there should be a provision in the contract for an exit plan.

The draft contract that accompanies the tender document should include any specific clauses that relate to the continuation of service after termination. Best practice is for the contract to include an agreed process by which the agreed strategy can be documented in an Exit Plan that is regularly updated.

Think about whether if you have an existing contract exit strategy which is known and understood by the business?

Who owns what at the end of the contract?

What information will be provided by the existing contractor and are they even obliged to assist, is this contractual or goodwill?

What access to procedures, systems and people will be allowed by the existing contractor to the company or to a potential new contractor and when?

What support will be provided by the existing contractor through any transition to a new supplier?

How long the transition period/support requirement will be? Is there any cost involved

It is far easier to get your supplier to agree to an exit plan as part of their tender submission and before the contract is signed.

Preparing for exit

Your contract will come to an end at some time. Either it will finish on the last day of the agreed contractual period, or it will terminate early – possibly due to performance problems on the part of the contractor; possibly due to a change of policy .

A workable exit strategy is an essential feature of any contract. Without it you risk becoming locked-in to your supplier and/or you risk disrupting service delivery.

An exit strategy needs to:-

Exit barriers

Build a Risk Register to identify barriers and how to manage those risks. This is not an exhaustive list, but such barriers may include:-

How those barriers can be overcome will clearly vary depending on the nature and the circumstances of each individual contract. But some things to consider…

Share this: