Winning a competitive process and signing a contract is not the end of procurement — it is the beginning of contract management. For most UK SMEs, contracts are signed and then forgotten until something goes wrong or renewal approaches. This guide covers the CIPS Contract Management Cycle, what belongs in a well-drafted contract, how to manage performance, and what the most important contract clauses actually mean. Based on CIPS methodology and adapted for SME realities.
Most procurement effort goes into the sourcing process — writing the brief, running the tender, selecting the supplier. Contract management — what happens after the contract is signed — receives far less attention, even though it is where most of the value is either delivered or lost.
Poor contract management costs UK organisations in four ways: suppliers underperform against agreed standards because nobody is monitoring them; contracts auto-renew at above-market rates because nobody flagged the renewal date; disputes escalate because the contract does not clearly address the scenario that has arisen; and relationships deteriorate because expectations were never clearly set.
CIPS defines a 12-step contract management cycle organised across four phases. Not every step is relevant to every contract — a £500/month SaaS subscription warrants different treatment to a £200k managed services agreement — but the framework ensures nothing critical is overlooked.
Post-award activities — the phases most SMEs underinvest in — cover three areas: managing the service delivery to ensure it meets agreed performance and quality levels; managing the supplier relationship to maintain an open and constructive working arrangement; and contract administration — the formal management of the agreement itself.
Before discussing how to manage a contract, it is worth being clear about what a well-drafted contract should contain. CIPS sets out eight criteria for a successful procurement contract:
Protects commercially sensitive and proprietary information from being disclosed to competitors. This matters in both directions — you do not want your supplier disclosing your pricing or business plans, and they do not want you disclosing their methodology or costs. In services procurement, these clauses are essential and should be mutual.
Defines what activities may or may not be sub-contracted, the standards that any sub-contractors must meet (insurance, compliance, quality), and the process for approval. Without this clause, a supplier can pass work to whoever they choose — potentially at lower quality and without your knowledge. You may have selected a supplier partly because of their direct capabilities; a sub-contracting clause ensures you actually get those capabilities.
These clauses define the financial remedies available if a party fails to perform. Liquidated damages are a pre-agreed sum that represents a genuine estimate of the loss caused by non-performance — they are enforceable precisely because they are agreed in advance rather than disputed after the fact. Penalty clauses that go beyond a genuine pre-estimate of loss are generally unenforceable in English law, so precision in drafting matters.
Establishes the process for any changes to the contract scope — approvals required, cost adjustment mechanism, and timescale implications. Without a clear variation clause, scope creep becomes the norm: additional work gets done informally, expectations diverge, and disputes arise when the invoice arrives.
Outlines the circumstances under which either party can exit the contract, the notice period required, and any financial implications. Termination for convenience (allowing exit without fault) is a standard commercial clause that should be present in almost all service contracts. Its absence leaves you locked in even if the relationship breaks down irrecoverably.
Specifies how disputes will be handled — typically through a tiered escalation process (negotiation → mediation → arbitration → litigation) that encourages resolution at the lowest level of formality and cost. Litigation is expensive, slow, and damaging to relationships; a well-drafted dispute resolution clause makes it the last resort rather than the first.
Contract performance management requires clear metrics established before the contract is signed, not invented after a problem occurs. CIPS identifies three types of performance outcome:
The five performance dimensions most relevant to managed service and professional services contracts are:
| Performance dimension | Why it matters | How to measure it |
|---|---|---|
| Contract compliance | Ensures smooth running and maintains the relationship while protecting both parties' rights | Set a target compliance level; conduct regular reviews against contract obligations |
| Regulatory compliance | Limits reputational damage and regulatory fines; requirements change over time | Periodic compliance checks; subscription to regulatory update services for relevant sectors |
| Delivery targets | Avoids operational disruption; early warning of supplier difficulty | Monthly performance report; track targets met, missed, and at risk |
| Key contract dates | Ensures critical milestones are met and reduces non-performance risk | Contract calendar with flagging at 30 and 90 days prior to critical dates |
| Contract value | Ensures spend remains within approved limits and provides data for benchmarking | Monthly spend reconciliation against contract value and rate card |
Different procurement requirements warrant different contract structures. The choice of contract type affects how risk is allocated between buyer and supplier — understanding this is essential before you sign.
| Contract type | How it works | Best for | Key risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed price (lump sum) | Supplier delivers a defined scope for a fixed total price | Well-defined projects with clear outputs and minimal expected changes | Scope creep — any change generates a variation claim |
| Cost-plus | Buyer pays actual costs incurred plus an agreed margin | Complex or novel projects where scope cannot be defined upfront | Cost overrun — no incentive for the supplier to control costs |
| Time and materials | Buyer pays for time spent and materials used at agreed rates | Projects with undefined or evolving scope (common in professional services and IT) | Budget certainty — total cost is difficult to forecast |
| Unit price | Fixed price per unit of work or output, total depends on volume | Repetitive activities with measurable outputs (logistics, maintenance, data entry) | Volume risk — buyer bears the cost if requirements increase |
| Framework agreement | Pre-agreed terms with one or more suppliers; individual call-offs against the framework | Recurring needs across multiple categories or lots; public sector procurement | Commitment risk — frameworks need to be used to justify their cost |
The end of a contract lifecycle is as important as the beginning. The decision to renew, retender, or exit should be based on evidence — performance data, market benchmarking, and a reassessment of the requirement — not on inertia.
The IQ Benchmark Index (bundleiq.co.uk/iq-benchmark-index.html) provides market rate data for the most common SME indirect spend categories. If your current contract rate is above the benchmark overpay signal, a competitive review is warranted regardless of how good the relationship feels.
The optimal timing for a competitive review is 6 months before renewal. At this point you have enough lead time to run a full process, sufficient leverage to negotiate with the incumbent, and time to transition if you decide to switch. Waiting until 30 days before renewal is the most common and most expensive procurement mistake.
Submit a brief on Bundle IQ 6 months before renewal. We benchmark the market, run the competition, and generate the contract — free for buyers.