Vendor Evaluation & Selection ============================= Slide 1: Vendor Evaluation & Selection Narration Anna: Think about picking a phone plan or internet provider. Every vendor promises fast service and low costs, but only some actually pick up the phone when you need help. Greg: Exactly. Choosing a vendor is a lot like dating—the glossy profile looks great, but you need to see how they handle stress and whether they keep their promises. Anna: A structured approach helps you avoid expensive surprises later. A poor choice can lead to downtime, lost data, or endless finger-pointing when things break. Greg: So vendor evaluation isn't busywork. It's the foundation for partnerships you can rely on when the unexpected strikes. On-screen text Vendor Evaluation & Selection Picking partners that deliver Slide 2: Why vendor selection matters Narration Anna: It's tempting to sign with the first vendor who offers a shiny demo, but poor choices can haunt every department. Greg: Right. Think about a marketing team that invests in a CRM only to discover it doesn't connect with the billing system. Now everyone's copying data by hand. Anna: Another risk is when a small vendor suddenly folds. Remember how some point-of-sale providers disappeared during the pandemic? Retailers were left scrambling. Greg: The lesson is simple: careful selection protects your budgets and your reputation. A little diligence up front keeps you from paying for rushed migrations or emergency fixes later. On-screen text Why vendor selection matters - Hidden costs of a poor match ripple across departments - Failed vendors can leave you scrambling for alternatives - Reliable partners free your team to focus on strategy Slide 3: Key evaluation criteria Narration Anna: Start with the hard facts like technical compatibility, capacity to scale, and a solid security posture. Greg: Asking about security is like asking if someone is a good driver—everyone says yes, so check their track record of audits and breaches. Anna: Consider financial stability too. Remember Borders Bookstore? When they shut down, many niche vendors lost a major client overnight. Greg: Cultural fit also matters. A startup vendor might move fast and break things, while a large enterprise expects lengthy approvals. Choose the rhythm that matches your own team. Anna: Finally, look for transparent communication and clear roadmaps so you aren't surprised by hidden fees or sudden changes. On-screen text Key evaluation criteria - Technical capability, scalability and security record - Financial health and industry reputation - Cultural fit and communication style - Compliance with privacy, legal and regulatory needs Slide 4: Selection process Narration Anna: Lay out a scoring matrix so each bidder is judged on the same terms. Greg: Think of it like hiring a contractor to remodel your kitchen—you provide the same specs so the bids are comparable. Anna: After issuing your request for proposal, ask vendors to run demos with your actual data. It's the best way to catch hidden problems. Greg: Reference checks work like restaurant reviews. One bad comment might be a fluke, but if many clients complain about late support, pay attention. Anna: Finally, negotiate the service levels and exit clauses before signing. The best deal balances cost, performance, and a plan B if things go south. On-screen text Selection process - Define requirements and a scoring matrix - Issue RFPs and compare proposals - Run demos with real data and check references - Negotiate service levels, pricing and exit clauses Slide 5: Risk management & ongoing relationships Narration Anna: Even the best vendor can stumble, so plan for failure before you sign anything. Greg: That means understanding their backup strategy, insurance coverage, and what happens if they miss critical deadlines. Anna: Include clear escalation paths and data ownership clauses in the contract. If you ever need to walk away, you want your information back without a fight. Greg: Consider total cost of ownership too—training, integration, and support add up. Run the numbers so an attractive price tag doesn't hide a poor return on investment. Anna: Ongoing check-ins keep the relationship healthy. Review metrics and hold periodic meetings so small issues don't grow into costly disputes. On-screen text Risk management & ongoing relationships - Plan for backups and data portability - Track total cost of ownership and ROI - Schedule regular reviews and escalation paths Slide 6: Key takeaway Narration Anna: Choosing wisely pays off long after the ink dries. Greg: When vendors align with your goals and culture, everyone wins—projects finish on time and support issues are resolved quickly. Anna: The right partnership frees your team to focus on strategy instead of firefighting. Greg: Keep evaluating vendors over time; relationships that start strong can drift if you ignore them. Anna: Schedule quarterly check-ins and review service-level metrics so small gaps don't grow into big failures. Greg: With a solid process and ongoing reviews, vendor selection becomes a cornerstone of your overall IT strategy rather than a one‑time task. On-screen text Key takeaway Thoughtful evaluation leads to reliable long‑term partnerships.