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Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Gulf Oil Spill: Officials say moratorium is latest in a series of bad breaks for LA economy

WWL logoImage via Wikipedia
What's the economic toll of the oil spill on the Louisiana economy? Well, in a nutshell, it ain't good! Here's a very good report on the matter from WWL-TV in New Orleans:



Read the story accompanying it below:
Officials say moratorium is latest in a series of bad breaks for LA economy | New Orleans News, Local News, Breaking News, Weather | wwltv.com | Gulf Oil Spill

What are your thoughts/comments? Post them here on the blog site and I will do a follow-up post.

David
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Mulching for Dollars: Reverse Auctions Provide Savings Beyond The Garden Variety | Bizcovering




A Very Competitive Reverse Auction Helps a Georgia School District Save Over a Third of Its Budgeted Outlay for Pine Straw.



OVERVIEW

As any Southerner knows, if there’s one drawback of having the shade of majestic pine trees it’s the raking of the pine straw that falls from the heights of the trees’ branches. Many a weekend in the South is spent raking, raking, and more raking. The homeowner’s nuisance however, is also a valuable commodity, as across the South, and indeed in many parts of the country, that same pine straw is a valuable landscaping tool.

For institutional buyers, buying enough pine straw to cover all the flower beds and landscaped spaces can amount to quite a bit of money. In the budgetary times all local communities are facing, any savings in the procurement area can help fund maintaining services and jobs. And not to be cliched, even in the area of landscaping and maintenance, no stone should go unturned in the procurement of landscaping materials.

This includes mulch – a commodity that defines what makes something a commodity! Recently, Louisville, Kentucky-based eBridge (http://www.ebridgeglobal.com) helped a school district in Georgia with a buy for pine straw for its facilities. The bidding between the six pre-qualified suppliers was intense in the electronic bidding forum, as during the reverse auction, the six rival firms drove the school district’s price down, down, down. All told, after fifty-eight bids were placed and ten time extensions, the Georgia school district ended-up saving over 34% off their expected purchase price. Those dollar savings on mulch can now be freed-up to cover other expenses for the district, and with times being tight, this could help fund textbooks, educational programs, and even help retain a teacher or two!

So, how can your agency save money through reverse auctions? If you are the head of procurement for any government agency, no matter how big or how small, and your buying any commodity type item or service, from mulch to yes, computers and even wireless services, you should look into how the strategic use of reverse auctions can save your agency precious budgetary resources in these worrisome economic times. Contact us here at the Reverse Auction Research Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/) to learn more.


Reference: Do You Have The Edge?, July 6, 2010, http://www.ebridgeglobal.com/blog/?p=640

BIOGRAPHY

David C. Wyld (dwyld.kwu@gmail.com) is the Robert Maurin Professor of Management at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, Louisiana. He is a management consultant, researcher/writer, and executive educator. His blog, Wyld About Business, can be viewed at http://wyld-business.blogspot.com/. He also serves as the Director of the Reverse Auction Research Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/), a hub of research and news in the expanding world of competitive bidding. Dr. Wyld also maintains compilations of his student’s publications regarding management concepts (http://toptenmanagement.blogspot.com/), book reviews (http://wyld-about-books.blogspot.com/) and international foods (http://wyld-about-food.blogspot.com/).


Read more:
Mulching for Dollars: Reverse Auctions Provide Savings Beyond The Garden Variety | Bizcovering


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Where Are You Going to Find That Job - or the Right Candidate?: Most Businesses Use Social Nets for Hiring


Great article from eMarketer - a must read for all (being that we are - in one way or another - on one side of the hiring equation)!

Read:
http://www.emarketer.com/Articles/Print.aspx?1007811

OK, get on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn - today!

David

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The Dad Life: The Best Video You'll Watch on Your Computer This Week







Love this clip - hits very, very close to home (well at least a few years ago for half of it), but classic, classic clip from YouTube - watch:



And read Steve Czaban's hilarious take on it below:

Czabe.com: The Dad Life

Captures middle-aged suburbia in this decade perfectly with lots of little great touches....forward this post on to all your friends about "The Dad Life."

David



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Monday, July 12, 2010

"The Proof is in the Pudding": Exhibit A on the Impact of Reverse Auctions in Governemnt



Previously here at the Reverse Auction Research Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/), we have reported on the successful electricity buy accomplished through the aggregation of a number of townships and communities across New Jersey who participated in a reverse auction conducted by the New Jersey Sustainable Energy Joint Meeting (NJSEM) (see Middletown, New Jersey Saves Well-over $100,000 on Energy Purchases through Reverse Auction Process - http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/2010/07/middletown-new-jersey-saves-well-over.html).

Now comes a report from the Cherry Hill Sun, reporting on the impact on the local township. You can read the full story by clicking on the link below:

Program to save town on lighting bill | Cherry Hill Sun

Great observations here that all public officials should take note of, as the aggregation of demand between small purchasers, combined with the competitive bidding environment of the reverse auction, produced big savings - in excess of ten percent - for the participating communities. Cherry Hill Mayor Bernie Platt commented that: “One of our most substantial, ever-increasing and painfully unpredictable operating costs is purchasing energy to run municipal services. When we paired that problem with our sustainability and environmental goals, such as reducing our carbon-emissions footprint, it seemed logical to join the NJSEM – and Township Council members and I are quite pleased that the decision is already paying off in the form of taxpayer savings.” Dan Keashen, Chief of Staff for the New Jersey Sustainable Energy Joint Meeting, remarked that: "The proof is in the pudding. Through this public bid for street-lighting, we received a lower rate than we had through our utility provider – that’s the sort of out-of-the-box collaborating that will help us through what is, essentially, a shared fiscal crisis.”

"The proof is in the pudding" and "out-of-the-box" stuff - that's not stringing cliches together - that's REAL savings that can save REAL dollars for all local, state, and even national governments through the strategic use of reverse auctions in their procurement efforts. And, with budgets being what they are across the public sector, this is a move that should have been made yesterday!

Do you want to explore how your agency can make the move to save money through using reverse auctions? If so, contact us here at the Reverse Auction Research Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/)
to learn more.

David

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A UK Sock Crisis Stemming from Reverse Auctions?: A £5 million quandary due to a lack of upfront preparation and education



Interesting tidbit coming from the Leicestershire Mercury about what, in essence, is a bid protest stemming from a UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) contract for socks ( a big one). The incumbent (who has had the contract for decades) is upset that it lost the business over a few pence - well, times a few pence for each of 2.5 million pairs to be supplied over the next four years! Read about it here:

A defence minister has agreed to meet David Tredinnick MP to discuss problems with a Government computer system that he claims led to a Leicestershire firm losing a £5 million contract – and cost workers their jobs.

The lesson to takeaway from this "sock crisis" - wherever you are located in the world, make sure your reverse auction provider can deliver on the due diligence and vendor training/support end of things. If the provider had done their work on the front-end here with the incumbent firm, then all we'd have is a case of "sour grapes" and not a potential legal issue!

We'll keep you posted here at the Reverse Auction Research Center (http://reverseauctionresearch.blogspot.com/) if anything develops out of this "sock crisis"! In the meantime, keep your feet dry for foot health!

David



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BP Oil Spill: The Red Adair of relief well drilling says 'no doubt about successful outcome'



Great story from the Telegraph of London - if only we could have as much confidence in BP as we should have in this gentleman, John Wright, whom the headline writer christens as "the Red Adair of relief well-drilling" (Wikipedia him, kiddos and you'll see why!) - read:

BP oil spill: the Red Adair of relief well drilling says 'no doubt about successful outcome' - Telegraph

Great line for all in any field of work:
"After 40 successes, I have come to believe it is a lot like golf; the more you practice, the luckier you get!" -----John Wright

Let's all hope he hits #41, too!

David

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