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Typical SLA / Project Deliverables Documents...

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    Typical SLA / Project Deliverables Documents...

    I'm about to put a tender in for a piece of work with a company I've done work with before, but it would be more of a 'price for the job' rather than a typical day rate. So no official agency contract would exist, but just an agreed list of deliverables. This is the first time I've had to do this and I've come up with some points to note on a handover document when the job is done, like any additional work would be billable etc, but I'm sure there would be some standard contractual statements that I'm missing. What I was wondering is could anyone point me in the direction of a good template of a SLA and / or project deliverables documentation which I could compare / bastardise, to use for the client.

    Any help appreciated...

    #2
    If it's your first time doing this work, make sure your contract is robust. You can get a standard contract from many of the legal document template websites then amend it and get it a once-over from a solicitor.

    The key tip for fixed price deals is to get the scope right and leave no woolly statements. For example: "Deliver an upgraded Exchange environment" can be anything from a two week job to a two year job. Most companies will accept a two-phase project for big projects, first stage is scoping and limited planing to bottom out the scope of work, second stage is delivery; if they don't then wonder why not and keep right on top of changes.

    Other tips for start-up include:

    - Set payment milestones either on fixed dates or on easily provable deliveries on regular schedules. If your payment milestones are more than a month apart, issue a work-in-progress statement at regular intervals, I like doing it weekly but monthly is perfectly acceptable; invite queries on every WIP statement, this will make invoicing far easier and should eliminate queries.
    - Set an early payment milestone to "test" their invoicing system. Try hard to get a signing payment or "on-start" payment, especially if the first major milestone payment is a long way off.
    - Keep your documentation accurate, this way it's far easier to incorporate inevitable changes and provide incremental change quotes for those changes. Be pedantic, accept no verbal promises in this area, it WILL come back to bite.
    - Agree the method of change control and pricing right at the very start!
    - Make sure cancellation and penalties are included in the contract. For example, if they cancel the project mid-way through a stage then you want to ensure that you're paid at least a pro-rated amount for labour and all expenses incurred, even if not used, e.g. a monthly season ticket. Most of my work has penalty clauses included that provides the client with a lot of security that I'm not going to dump and run, they also give me a stick if I'm unceremoniously dumped for a cheaper delivery resource once I've done the hard planning.

    There are plenty of other hints but those are the key ones that hit many people doing fixed price work that can be solved right at the start.

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      #3
      Originally posted by craig1 View Post
      There are plenty of other hints but those are the key ones that hit many people doing fixed price work that can be solved right at the start.
      First rule of costing - think of a number and double it.
      Best Forum Advisor 2014
      Work in the public sector? You can read my FAQ here
      Click here to get 15% off your first year's IPSE membership

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        #4
        There's a chapter in the PMI's PMBOK about this which would be useful to making sure that you've got all bases covered, might find that somewhere or other on t'internet.

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          #5
          Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
          First rule of costing - think of a number and double it.
          First rule of scheduling: Apply the Scotty Principle!

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            #6
            Originally posted by craig1 View Post
            First rule of scheduling: Apply the Scotty Principle!
            We cannae do it, she's gonnae blow??
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              #7
              Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
              We cannae do it, she's gonnae blow??
              1. Estimate the required time for completion of the given task.
              2. Depending on importance of task, add 25-100% additional time to original estimate.
              3. Commit to inflated time estimate with the client.
              4. Be willing to negotiate the time down, try to resist saying "ye cannae change the laws of physics!"
              5. Deliver on your originally estimated time in 1. (or even slightly over), publicly praise all the subordinates for going above-and-beyond in getting it in early. This defuses cries of "Fix!" as the subordinates get a rare bit of unwarranted praise and it usually makes them believe they've achieved miracles.
              6. Bask in the admiration for your skills as a miracle worker.

              Scotty was no miracle worker, he just knew how to sell a delivery schedule then exceed it.

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