Off-Prem

Channel

UK Home Office tenders £5m for a supplier to help it greenlight IT projects. Yes, you read that correctly

Procurement raises questions over supplier creating its own sales pipeline within govt


The UK's Home Office is tendering to recruit a supplier to help manage the selection of its IT projects, leading to concerns over conflict of interest.

The notice published in the public sector Digital Marketplace is seeking a company to help deliver and operate the "discovery-as-a-service" capability for the "Innovation - Law Enforcement" (I-LE) function within the Police and Public Protection Technology Portfolio (PPPT), with a £5m contract on the table.

The snappy moniker – DaaS – alludes to the discovery phase in the UK government's IT project service manual. Discovery, it says, means learning about users and what they're trying to achieve; constraints the project faces in making changes to how the service is run because, for example, of technology or legislation; and the underlying policy intent the project is set to address and so on.

The Home Office sees the discovery phase as part of "demand management," which is procurement speak for only giving users what they really need, rather than what they want or what they say they need.

Observers will note that, without appropriate safeguards in place, the contract seemingly leaves open the possibility of the winning supplier managing the project selection process in favour of services it offers, with an inside track on the client's thinking.

One supplier working with the UK government, who asked not to be named, said it could mean the winning bidder is given the opportunity to develop a sales lead pipeline within government, putting it in the prime spot for picking up more work.

AWS tops up the Bezos rocket fund thanks to more money from Brit tax collection agency

READ MORE

Last year, AWS's Professional Services wing was handed a £2m contract by Her Majesty's Customs and Revenue to supply consultants that would work on accelerating the adoption of AWS products and services in the British tax collection agency.

The Register also understands that Home Office insiders are aware of the possible conflicts of interest, but no safeguards have been put in place. The individual, who asked not to be named, is also concerned that the winner may have already been selected.

The Home Office said of the tender: "This will not be a sales pipeline for the winning supplier. The Demand Management process will ensure that all work meets the needs and priorities of the Home Office in the most appropriate and efficient way to deliver value for money."

It went on to insist: "All associated procurement will adhere to the public procurement policy framework, ensuring free and open competition and value for money."

The DaaS tender comes at a sensitive time for UK government procurement as the former chief commercial officer Bill Crothers, who founded the Crown Commercial Service (CCS), responsible for much of the cross-Whitehall IT spending and large government frameworks, is at the centre of a media storm over commercial lobbying in government.

It emerged last week that Crothers joined Greensill Capital, a supply chain finance firm, as an adviser before he left the civil service in 2015.

He joined the firm as a director in 2016.

Former prime minister David Cameron, who worked as a special adviser to the Greensill board, is alleged to have sent texts and emails to ministers while working for the company. ®

Send us news
16 Comments

NHS dangles £1.5B carrot to be outfitted with everything from PCs to printers

Gadget gladiators line up to supply world's largest healthcare org

UK government can't kick consultancy habit despite promises

Spending returns to pandemic levels as tech deals make up bulk of framework agreements

City council faces £216.5M loss over Oracle system debacle

Europe's largest local authority canceled expected savings baked into financial plans

UK.gov to chuck up to £5B to gang of back office software vendors

Framework deal set to run until 2029 as central govt transitions to new ERP SaaS model

Britain's Ministry of Defence accused of wasting £174M on 'external advice'

Morpheus comms system online by 2025? You must be dreaming

US senators propose guardrails for government AI purchases and operations

Bill proposes appointment of chief AI officers, privacy safeguards, and lots of testing

UK government faces £17.5M shortfall from UKCloud liquidation

Cabinet Office letter also reveals department lost money on unfinished database project

Home Office’s shiny immigration system glitches causing delays

Amid reports emerge of technical issues, immigration teams keep 24-year-old legacy system up and running

UK county council misses deadline for £7.3M RISE with SAP system launch

Gloucestershire reluctant to set new date in S/4HANA migration saga

Fujitsu set to be preferred bidder in UK digital ID scheme

Selection comes despite Japanese supplier's role in Post Office scandal

Local councils struggle with ill-fitting software despite spending billions with suppliers

Even when tech crew gets the tweaks approved, vendor lead times are bonkers, says report

UK government sets sights on £8B tech procurement overhaul

Mega framework set to replace earlier deals coming to an end next year