WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS
Course
NIGP – CPP
1. Procurement Law & Regulations
Q1: A state’s statute requires competitive sealed bidding for purchases above $50,000. A
contract was awarded for $55,000 without bidding, citing “sole source.” Under what condition is
this valid?
A: Only if the procurement officer documents in writing that only one supplier exists.
Explanation: Most procurement codes allow sole-source awards when there's only one supplier
and this fact is properly documented, justified, and approved by the authority or legal counsel.
Failing to follow this process can lead to non-compliance and legal protest.
2. Planning & Analysis
Q2: A municipality has issued multiple small P-card orders for office furniture totaling $120,000
to avoid the $50,000 formal bidding threshold. What is the best corrective action?
A: Implement and enforce anti-splitting policies to consolidate orders and ensure procurements
comply with thresholds.
Explanation: Splitting orders to evade competitive bidding is typically unauthorized.
Procurement should establish clear rules preventing splitting and train staff accordingly to
maintain compliance and transparency.
3. Sourcing & Solicitation
Q3: During an RFP, several vendors ask for clarification about specifications. The solicitation
deadline is 5 days away. What should the procurement team do?
A: Publish a formal Addendum to the RFP, addressed to all potential vendors, at least 72 hours
before the closing date.
Explanation: Ethical practice and transparency demand that any clarifications or changes be
communicated equally to all bidders, and in accordance with the timeline specified in the
solicitation.
4. Contract Management
,Q4: A vendor fails to deliver on time due to a national material shortage. The contract includes a
force majeure clause. Should the vendor be penalized for late delivery?
A: No—if the material shortage is covered and the vendor provides timely notification and
documentation under the force majeure clause.
Explanation: When properly invoked per contract terms, force majeure relieves suppliers from
liability for failure to perform due to events outside their control.
5. Supplier Relationship Management
Q5: What is a key indicator to monitor for a vendor providing IT services post-award?
A: Performance metrics or Service Level Agreements (SLAs), such as system uptime,
response time, and problem resolution.
Explanation: Ongoing contract success depends on measurable performance indicators. Regular
performance evaluation helps manage vendors proactively and ensures contract compliance.
6. Ethics & Professionalism
Q6: A bidder eagerly offers free event tickets to the procurement manager. How should that be
handled?
A: Politely refuse and complete a disclosure form according to policy, escalation to ethics
officer if needed.
Explanation: Accepting gifts compromises impartiality. Ethics rules typically prohibit such
offers, requiring disclosure and recusal if necessary.
7. Financial & Cost Management
Q7: A procurement officer is evaluating total cost of ownership (TCO) versus lowest bid. The
low bid has higher maintenance costs over ten years. What should be done?
A: Conduct a TCO analysis, awarding to the vendor with the lowest lifecycle cost, not just
initial price.
Explanation: TCO considers acquisition, operating, maintenance, and disposal costs. Choosing
based solely on lowest bid can lead to higher overall expenditure.
8. Risk Management
, Q8: You discover the awarded provider is using subcontractors not named in the bid. What
should you do?
A: Review the contract language. If changes in key personnel or subcontractors require
approval, request immediate disclosure, evaluate the subcontractor's qualifications, and address
according to contract terms.
Explanation: Changes in contractors may trigger right-to-approve clauses or require
amendments to ensure performance standards and compliance.
9. Technology & e-Procurement
Q9: When transitioning to an e-sourcing platform, what is a primary change management
challenge?
A: Ensuring staff and supplier training and adoption, and integrating the system with existing
procurement workflows.
Explanation: Technology adoption fails without clear training and communication. Providing
user support, training sessions, and phased implementation builds user confidence and system
effectiveness.
10. Strategic Procurement & Innovation
Q10: How can a procurement team encourage sustainable sourcing for disposables like paper
and ink cartridges?
A: Incorporate sustainability criteria in RFPs (e.g., recycled content, EPEAT certification),
evaluate lifecycle impact, and add vendor reporting of environmental performance.
Explanation: Procurement plays a key role in organizational sustainability goals. Clear
sustainability requirements and evaluation criteria enable better alignment with policy objectives
and environmental responsibility.
11. Source Selection & Evaluation
Q11: A solicitation uses a Best Value tradeoff method. Two proposals scored similarly, but one
offers significant lifecycle cost savings. Which should be selected?
A: Choose the proposal that offers substantially lower total cost of ownership, even if its
initial score is slightly lower, provided it meets minimum technical requirements.
Explanation: Best Value allows tradeoffs between price and non-price factors. When lifecycle
savings are significant, they justify selecting the cost-saving option.
12. Contract Administration