Procurement Strategy definition

Procurement Strategy means the Council’s published Procurement Strategy setting out its ambition for procurement and confirming a category management and whole lifecycle approach to procurement;
Procurement Strategy. - means the procurement strategy set out in Rule 23
Procurement Strategy means the strategy which the Council must prepare in accordance with Standing Order 40;

Examples of Procurement Strategy in a sentence

  • The principles of the DWP Sustainable Procurement Strategy should be followed, and the contract should be delivered in line with DWP’s Sustainability Objectives outlined in the 2023/24 Departmental Plan (to help deliver the government’s 25 Year Environment Plan).


More Definitions of Procurement Strategy

Procurement Strategy means the strategy document that explains the College's procurement aims and how
Procurement Strategy means the Council’s Procurement Strategy as agreed by the Council every three years;
Procurement Strategy has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 2.18(a).
Procurement Strategy means the general terms related to how a good, service, or construction will be procured.
Procurement Strategy means the planned approach to a procurement, including whether to adopt an Invitational Competitive Process or Advertised Competitive Process, the procurement method to be used, and the Contract structure such as length of the term and whether a blanket order approach will be used.
Procurement Strategy means the Council’s Procurement Strategy as agreed by the Council from time to time;
Procurement Strategy means the strategy to be agreed and adopted by the Steering Group for the procurement strategy in respect of the Works which shall include the matters referred to in the relevant headings in Schedule 8 "Project Management Fee" means of total construction costs on a Phase by Phase basis which accounts for internal resources which typically includes associated leadership roles (e.g. project management lead) site wide and plot roles (e.g. delivery managers cost planning health and safety public realm and infrastructure teams and services under CDM Regulations) excluding external resources such as surveyors infrastructure and transport consultants