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2010 Tangoe, Inc.
White Paper:
5 Essential Steps to Better TelecomContract Negotiations
By Suzanne Rosato, Esq.Vice President, Strategic Consulting
Tangoe, Inc.35 Executive Blvd.Orange, CT 06477
Phone: 203-859-9300www.tangoe.com
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Executive Summary
The objective of this white paper is to provide a high level overview of five of the
major steps in the process of negotiating agreements for telecommunications services
with service providers. The essential five steps that will be discussed are:
1. Developing an Inventory
2. Deciding on a Strategy
3. Presenting Requirements or Issuing a Request for Proposal (RFP)
4. Analyzing Offers and Addressing Deficiencies
5. Getting to Contract
The art and science of telecom contract negotiations is extremely complex and
not something that can be completely learned or understood in the time it will take to
read this white paper. The goal here is to offer brief insight into the five key steps within
the negotiation process, and shed a little light on how they pertain to you, the potential
client, as well as the potential service provider(s). Many of the best practices shared are
based on decades of field work and thousands of actual negotiations.
If your organization is about to embark on a quest for telecommunications
services, these are the basics steps you should take in order to achieve the greatest
financial savings for your company while minimizing risk.
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Step 1: Developing an Inventory
Quite simply, you wont know what to buy if you dont know what you own.
If you dont have a current inventory of your service, (and therefore need to
discover what your enterprise purchases), there are a number of tools you can utilize to
get your arms around your requirements. The telecom industry often refers to the
inventory as a demand set because it provides a basis for the financial analysis of
contract offers, allowing the organization to measure projected annual expenditures and
savings. Invoices are one tool that can be leveraged to try and get a clear
understanding of exactly what it is that you are currently purchasing. Also, most of the
major providers have good reports available in their online billing and reporting sites or
portals where companies can pull an aggregate view of the rate elements that an
organization is currently purchasing. What is not always intuitive, however, is what
reports should be pulled in order to get the type of detail required to break out the
service usage by rate component. The information is available; its just a matter of
figuring out how to get to it! Since the portals vary by provider, we would suggest
utilizing the help or support functions if necessary to understand how to customize the
requested reports.
Another tool that can be leveraged as an inventory check point is the service
providers contract compliance report. This is a report that that service providers should
be providing to customers each month, although the reality is that most enterprise
clients are fortunate if they get a couple of these reports per year The providers isnt
required to supply this report, but best practice is to demand the report (a good
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negotiator will put the provision in a Stewardship Agreement.) In addition to showing
how your organization is tracking on contractual commitments, the report provides a
breakdown of spend by service, thereby helping to identify any gaps in inventory and
where they might be.
An alternate way to tackle building an inventory is to consider having a services
audit performed by a third party vendor. There are many companies that will perform the
audit for no fee, unless they recover credits on your behalf, in which case they will take
a percentage of the savings. This is a low risk, low cost way of having an accurate
inventory performed.
Local Services
Local services can be one of the toughest areas to build a demand set for;
decision making is often decentralized and bills are typically not detailed. When details
are available, there are literally thousands of Universal Service Order Codes (USOCs)
referenced by the Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs). One of the creative
ways clients can get a complete inventory of their local services is by having a
Competitive Local Exchange Carrier (CLEC), or a reseller compete against the
incumbent for the business. One advantage of using a CLEC or reseller is their ability
to provide consolidated invoice and inventory reports. It may seem like an extreme step
to consider an alternate provider in order to get an inventory, but there are usually
material savings to be had, and most resellers offer zero commitment agreements that
allow companies to switch back if they are unhappy with the service.
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Once the current demand set is built, its time to look into the futureat least for
the length of term of the average telecom agreement (typically three years). If there are
any technology migrations on the horizon, different scenarios must be modeled in order
to understand how that will impact your usage profile and spend.
Organizations should also be looking at whats going on within their specific
industry and examining anything you know thats particular to your company. If you are
anticipating layoffs, for instance, your agreement needs to provide more flexibility than
an enterprise that is anticipating record growth. Even things like implementing new
policies to manage costs in areas where there might be abuse can have a significant
impact on usage and should be factored into the demand set.
Step 2: Deciding on a Strategy
It is best practice for an organizations project management team to agree on one
strategy before beginning the negotiations process. One of the first steps is to identify
the objectives. The primary goal for most enterprises is to reduce prices, but there might
be additional target areas where youd like to see service improvement as well. For
instance, if you currently have multiple vendors providing services, the organization
might be looking to consolidate to gain efficiencies in the management of providers.
There might also be areas to address around stewardship in terms of account support,
reporting, or billing. It is best practice to identify all objectives and present them to the
providers up front so that the deals can be quoted on a holistic cost basis. Once
objectives have been solidified, the second major decision point is whether to engage in
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an RFP or renegotiate with a current provider. Some organizations are predisposed to
wait until they can competitively bid their services out based on internal policies, etc.
The reality is that over 80 percent of RFPs go to incumbents, based on the inherent
advantage that the current provider has in being able to deliver savings more quickly, as
well as the investment required to transition providers.
Organizations should always be aware of how financials look on a pro forma over
time. For example, if you renegotiate with your current provider at mid-term (say 18
months into a three year term) and realize a 10 percent savings, you will have 18
months to take advantage of those cost reductions; that would have to be balanced
against what could be achieved in an RFP. If the RFP results in a migration to another
providerand since most transitions take three months or more to completeit may be
more than 18 months before the savings is realized.
Again, an analysis of the different scenarios over time is critical. Engaging an
experienced, carrier agnostic consultant with their own intellectual property in the
renegotiation process enables organizations to compare their results against what
similar clients are achieving in like RFPs, or what accepting a mid-term offer might entail
in terms of cost. If the consultant is good, they should be able to secure very close to
the RFP-like results.
Some enterprises, when they are less than a year away from fulfilling their
contractual obligations, decide to combine the RFP and renegotiation strategies. They
take an offer to their current provider for first right of refusal, with the message that if the
offer isnt competitive and representative of what could be achieved with an RFP
process, the job will go to bid. The providers are motivated to avoid the time and
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resource expenditure of going through the RFP process. As mentioned above, there is
always the opportunity to engage an objective third party to verify the results.
What is the Providers Incentive?
A third area that should be considered when developing a negotiations strategy
is what incentive there is for the providers to come to the table, whether its to secure
additional business or protect the business they currently have. Clearly, the ability to go
to RFP provides built-in leverage for the enterprise, but a well-negotiated agreement will
include a rate review clause that can also provide inherent leverage. Typically these
clauses provide for an annual or mid-term review. Best practice is to have any rate
review clause include a penalty stating that if an agreement with the provider is not
reached in a reasonable period of time (say 30 to 60 days), the organization has the
ability to reduce their commitment by a material percentage (ideally 25 percent or
greater). This enables you to move a portion of the business to another provider right
away. If you follow best practice guidelines and do not commit more than 70 percent of
your business to any one provider, you could potentially move almost half of your
revenue to another supplier without penalty.
Other sources of incentive for the providers include new applications and service
orders (either a brand new service or a service previously provided by a competitor).
Most account representatives are compensated based on maintaining and growing
annual revenue; additional expenditures help them make their quotas.
Another incentive for providers (beyond revenue objectives) is to increase the
length of term of the agreement and/or increase the amount of committed business. It
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is fairly typical for a renegotiation proposal to include an extension in term and, often an
adjustment in the commitment level as well.
Another effective strategy is to identify any services that could readily be
migrated from one provider to another and use this as a carrot to get a non-incumbent
provider excited about the opportunity for your business. In truth, even a relatively small
amount of business or revenue can generate a considerable amount of competitive
interest. A non-incumbent provider may move aggressively to secure a small amount of
business as a foot in the door with the goal of building a relationship with your
enterprise to better position themselves for the next large-scale competitive sourcing
event.
Step 3: Presenting Requirements or Issuing an RFP
RFP Situations
The first step in the RFP process is selecting your bidders. Remember that it is in
your best interest to look beyond the first tier suppliers. Although it is not recommended
to invite a provider to bid for your services if you cant realistically consider doing
business with them, there are certain second tier providers that get very high grades
from enterprise clients in terms of service and support.
Some well-known second tier providers to consider for your next RFP might include:
Global Crossing
Level 3
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Paetec
Qwest (especially national clients with data services needs)
BT (would require international component of significant size)
Cable and Wireless (partners with Sprint domestically)
It is considered best practice to issue detailed pricing worksheets to all bidders.
Restricting the bidders from making any changes to the spreadsheet beyond filling in
the blanks will force respondents to answer in the same consistent manner, saving time
in analyzing the financials. If youre requiring custom SLAs, do not let the providers write
the terms; even just one exception can render SLAs meaningless. It is recommended
you issue a detailed script of what providers are required to agree to.
Every telecom RFP should include requirements for terms and conditions. At a
minimum, the initial RFP should cover basics including commitment levels and required
terms. Laying out a complete list of term requirements in the initial document to create a
holistic view of the deal is recommended in order to preserve your rights around service
support and billing while minimizing risk.
Creative solutions are encouraged, but in order to avoid potential confusion
bidders should be directed to submit responses to the current design as outlined in the
RFP. Any additional creative proposals can be submitted in the appendices and
highlighted in the executive summary.
Its also recommended that you require draft agreements be submitted along with
the initial RFP responses. This will speed the process as you move to agreement with
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the successful bidders. (It takes less time for the providers to modify an existing
agreement than to create a document from scratch.) Its generally considered very
effective to hold a bidders conference a few days after the RFP is released; this gives
bidders an opportunity to ask questions while you highlight areas of the RFP that are
particularly important. Inevitably, the bidders will request additional face time; we
recommend stating that additional time has to be earned. The first hurdle they must
clear is to have a competitive response to the RFP. This practice will avoid wasting
time with an unviable vendor that cant compete from a financial perspective.
Renegotiations
Similar to the way you would prepare for an RFP, a renegotiation also requires
you to prepare a detailed demand set. Think of it as a way of checking the math that
comes with the providers proposal. Its also a key to being able to compare proposed
commitment levels to your run rate (once youve taken into account any anticipated
changes to make it representative for future term.)
Presenting contract requirements in a face-to-face meeting with the provider is
one effective approach. The provider is informed beforehand that no response is
required of them in that initial meeting, but what is required is an appropriate level of
representation including someone from pricing or offer development, as well as
executives from the sales or marketing side. The attendance of these higher level
provider representatives will help insure that your deal receives an appropriate level of
focus and attention with sufficient resources assigned to the effort. The requirements to
be presented should include targets for all relevant rate elements as well as
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stewardship and/or term and condition requirements if there are areas where changes
are required.
Being candid with the provider in articulating whats in it for them, is considered
best practice In other words, if there is a willingness to extend a term, lay that out in the
requirements presentation. Try to avoid any situation where youre asking the provider
to price down a service with nothing in return.
Dont forget to include the proposal time line as well as identifying a target date
for an amended agreement to be signed in order for the provider to commit to
supporting your timeframes.
Step 4: Analyzing Offers and Addressing Deficiencies
Both RFPs and renegotiations need to be analyzed once the offers come in.
Renegotiation responses should be loaded into the demand set and compared to the
current providers numbers; remember, your demand set may vary based on tweaks
youve made in terms of a future view.
Relative to an RFP response, organizations will want to look for anomalies as
you line up the different bidders responses next to one another. Its very common for
mistakes to be made, (e.g. incorrect decimals, etc.) If there is a number that doesnt
make sense, follow up and verify the response with the bidder. Since you may not have
a single vendor award, you will want to model the different award scenarios. The terms
and conditions can also be lined up in a spreadsheet so that important elements like
term requirements and commitment levels can be compared. In your review of the RFP
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documents make note of any exceptional requirements that are being made for
exclusivity, or requirements for specific services awards.
Once the analysis has been completed, its time to identify the deficiencies or
gaps by reviewing the first round financials and any deal breaker terms and conditions.
Clearly if a provider is requiring 100 percent of your business and youre contemplating
a multi-vendor award, thats a deal breaker term youll need to address. You may also
consider eliminating some bidders if their pricing is out of the ballpark or for being non-
compliant in some material area. Requirements should be communicated back to the
providers in writing so that they can be circulated internally within the provider
organization as needed. It is recommended that you try to include some positive
feedback along with any deficiencies so that the communication isnt overly negative. .
We also suggest mentioning a few areas that you find acceptable, thereby taking them
off the table.
Lather. Rinse. Repeat.
Whether you are running an RFP or conducting a renegotiation, youre going to
have to go through as many rounds as needed in order to reach your objectives. As
you proceed through the rounds, there may be a need to reprioritize. (You may also
need to weigh the cost of another month spent negotiating against any opportunity cost
in unrealized savings.)
When you are near the end of the negotiations and you have a short list of
requirements, one tactical strategy is to say, If you comply with A, B, and C we will sign
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the agreement. That can be very effective in getting the supplier motivated and
organized around meeting those last few requirements and getting to signature.
Escalating unresolved issues to a higher level representative is a contract negotiations
tool that should be used only when truly necessary. For instance, escalation may be
warranted if you find yourself stuck in a bottleneck situation and you want to identify
whether the bottleneck is on the sales or pricing side. If your account team is telling you
that pricing wont approve a requested offer, its a good idea to reach out to a contact in
the pricing organization for verification. If they tell you that the deal hasnt even been
submitted for approval, you know your bottleneck is on the sales side. This scenario, by
the way, is not unusual; calling the account team out on their misstatements will
usually help move things along.
In instances where pricing truly was holding up approval, weve had account
teams ask for our assistance in escalating. These teams might be trying to act as your
advocates internally but they need an extra push to get approval. This illustrates that
escalations dont have to be adversarial. Each situation is unique, with the goal being to
enable the provider to put forth the best possible offer. If there are existing relationships
you should not hesitate to use them once the decision to escalate has been made. If
someone is playing golf with the regional vice president, you can exert pressure from
more than one direction.
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Step 5: Getting to Contract
Assuming that you are able to address any and all deficiencies successfully, the
next step is to request final contract pages. Ideally your legal team has been engaged in
the process early and are prepared and expecting the contracts. It is not unusual to see
disagreements over the particulars of clauses such as privacy (especially Personally
Identifiable Individual information or PII), intellectual property, and liability. In fact, deals
can stall for months over these types of issues, resulting in millions of dollars in lost
savings. If overly protracted negotiations around the specifics of legal language become
an issue, consider reaching out to a third party for advice, ideally someone with an
extensive intellectual property library on how providers have compromised to meet
enterprise requirements on legal clauses in telecom agreements. Access to this insider
knowledge of how to break through a stalemate can be very instrumental in moving a
deal toward closure.
Expect that there will be errors in the initial iteration of the contract as you move
toward signature-ready documents. Its reasonable to allow two weeks after an initial
request to receive correct final documents that are reflective of everything youve
agreed upon.
Be aware of provider cutoffs for effective dates (signature deadlines vary by
provider.) For example, if you get your deal countersigned by AT&T after the tenth of
the month, you will have to wait a full additional month for the voice rates to be effective.
Make sure you know the critical dates so you can plan accordingly and avoid losing out
on savings.
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Its also a good idea to know the availability of executives needed to sign the
deal. Its frustrating to have things lined up to make a deadline only to discover the guy
who needs to sign just left on vacation. Finally, when going through the final signature
process, be sure to get the providers commitment to review the first invoices to verify
that the organization is receiving the negotiated rates.
Conclusion
While clearly there is much more to negotiating telecommunications agreements
than five simple steps, the objective here was to provide tips in each of the five areas
discussed that will better prepare organizations to move expeditiously through the
negotiations process.
About the Author
SuzanneRosatoisaveteranofmorethan20yearsintheinformationtechnology
andcommunicationsindustries.Suzannehasworkedforleadingtelecomexpense
managementserviceprovidersandthenationslargestcommunicationscarriersaswell,
andherextensiveexperiencehasenabledhertodevelopathoroughunderstandingof
economicimpactsofvarioustechnologiesandtheprocurementprocessforsecuring
thosetechnologies.
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SuzannehasearnedaB.S.fromClarksonUniversity,anM.B.A.fromRensselear
PolytechnicInstitute,andaJurisDoctoratefromtheUniversityOfConnecticutSchool
OfLawandhasbeenadmittedtopracticelawinConnecticutandNewYorkState.
About Tangoe
For more information on any of the topics mentioned in this white paper, please
contact Tangoe. Our Strategic Consulting team will be happy to assess your current
situation and provide recommendations at no cost.
Tangoe's Strategic Consulting services combine decades of collective consulting
and billing analysis expertise with an extensive technology-driven knowledgebase of
contract rates and terms to negotiate world-class telecom contracts and terms and
conditions that deliver market floor rates. Contact us to learn how Tangoe can assist
you in best managing your existing and pending carrier contracts.
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