Contract Strategies for Major Projects
by Merrow, Edward W.;
English | 2022 | ISBN: 1119902096 | 307 pages | True PDF | 5.18 MB
Major Projects are Delayed by Months or Years, and Cost Millions More Than Budgeted, Because of Common Mistakes Made at the Contracting Stage
Organizations that invest huge amounts of capital in major building/industrial projects almost never do the engineering and building themselves. They hire engineering and construction contractors to do it for them. Unfortunately, selecting contractors and negotiating the terms of a major project is one of the most difficult aspects of project management…and organizations waste billions of dollars and "bake in" months or years of delay by doing it wrong. Contracting is also the area of project management that is most prone to firmly held opinions unencumbered by any facts. We intend to remedy that situation with this book. Drawing on a properietary detailed database of over 1100 major projects, the world's leading industrial engineering project consultant, Ed Merrow explains:
Key Principles of Contracting for Major Projects:
Owners are from Mars; contractors are from Venus
All the biggest risks in contracting belong to the owner
Contracting "games" will normally be won by contractors, not owners
Most risk transfer from owners to contractors is an illusion
Contractors do good projects well and bad projects poorly
Contractors may have shareholders, but they are not your shareholders!
Mixing different contract types with different contractors on the same project is unwise
Economize on the need for trust; trust only when being trustworthy has value
Merrow also explains:
Which contract incentives work and which don't and WHY
Which of over a dozen contracting strategies work best and which ones hardly ever work and WHY
The strategic advice in this book is designed for owners and contractor project managers, team members and supply chain, executives, and other business leaders involved in major projects. It's also an indispensable resource for engineers, leaders of industrial firms, bankers, and academics studying the messy realities of the construction and engineering industries.