On his first day in office, President Obama challenged leaders in government to "use innovative tools, methods, and systems to cooperate among themselves, across all levels of Government, and with nonprofit organizations, businesses, and individuals in the private sector." The acquisition process represents one of the most important areas of collaboration between government and the private sector.
Unfortunately, it is also among the most complex and least transparent. The Better Buy Project is an experiment dedicated to the belief that there's a lot of room for improvement in the way government buys products and services. We're testing this hypothesis by asking for your ideas on how to make acquisition process more open, transparent and collaborative.
The best part of this project is that the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) GSA would really like to adopt some of your best ideas. Promising ideas will be selected by GSA to be piloted on an upcoming acquisition, where lessons learned will be captured for future implementation. But that really depends on us, and the ideas we're able to produce.
This project is concerned primarily with the pre-contract-award stages of the acquisition process—the activities that take place before the government "signs on the dotted line" to buy a product or service. Those areas are:
The ultimate goal is to improve how government learns about and chooses what it buys—in other words, to make government a more informed, more effective consumer.
We are looking for ideas to make federal acquisition more open, transparent, and collaborative. What does that mean?
We believe that making the process more open, transparent and collaborative will make government more likely to end up with the right item at the right price.
Close WindowToday, GSA's FEDSIM group launched two acquisitions using ideas submitted to the BetterBuy project website - specifically, ideas for applying collaborative technology to the acquisition process.
The first acquisition is data.gov. GSA is seeking input on a requirement to provide a data repository for data.gov.
The second is called "Clearpath". GSA is looking for input on the technical infrastructure for our Clearpath hosting and is developing the approach for a future acquisition. GSA will launch Clearpath in a few weeks.
In the first phase of this pilot, we have launched a wiki (http://betterbuy.fas.gsa.gov) and are asking the public to contribute and help us shape the requirements and solicitation. The wiki contains background information on the requirements and draft sections in 'b-m'. Comments and questions (and answers to our questions) in each section are encouraged. We will also use Twitter to tweet procurement statuses and to receive and answer questions. The twitter account to follow is @gsa_fedsim
In subsequent phases of the acquisition we will incorporate additional Web 2.0 tools to continue the collaborative process.
We intend to provide updates about our progress from both the government and industry perspectives on the BetterBlog site, so check it often. If you are contributing to the requirements build as either a government or industry participant and would like to blog about your experience, let me know and we'll set you up to post.
You are probably wondering how we selected the ideas we decided to use on the first two acquisitions. We reviewed all the ideas submitted through BetterBuy, categorized them, and matched appropriate ideas with the selected acquisitions. Our focus was on incorporating collaborative technology in the acquisition process.
So what about the other 100+ ideas we received on the site that we aren't using or the ideas that aren't technology related? We are thrilled with all the ideas we've received and the dialog that is taking place around them. We are going to continue to leave the BetterBuy site up and monitor for additional ideas and comments.
We have asked the American Council for Technology/Industry Advisory Council's Acquisition Management Shared Interest Group to review the ideas and select a few more to put into action. That group will be reaching out to the Govloop Acquisition2.0 to recruit volunteers to work further on those selected additional ideas.
The Govloop Acquisition2.0 group has been an incredible catalyst for discussion and ideas to improve the federal acquisition process to make it more open, transparent and collaborative (which was how the BetterBuy project was born in the first place).
I want to thank all of you for your energy and participation, particularly the ACT/IAC and the National Academy for Public Administration for the help and support provided on this project.
We have just begun our journey!