Standard Procurement System Use and User Satisfaction
Abstract
The audit was performed in response to concerns expressed by the Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Budget that DoD was not effectively spending Federal funds to acquire the Standard Procurement System (SPS) and SPS lacked needed functionality. SPS is an automated information system that will support procurement functions from receipt of requirements until contract closeout at all DoD procurement organizations. SPS is intended to replace 76 procurement systems and manual processes. As of December 30, 2000, the Program Management Office reported that SPS was used by 16,207 users at 745 DoD sites. By the end of FY 2003, SPS is expected to serve 43,000 users at 1,100 DoD sites. Estimated costs for SPS are $433.5 million to procure commercial software licenses and support services. Estimated life-cycle costs for FY 1995 through FY 2005 are $3.7 billion. Operational benefits from SPS are estimated at $1.4 billion derived primarily from increased productivity and reduced costs associated with paper transactions. The Director, Defense Procurement, selected a contractor to provide a commercial off-the-shelf product to accomplish 45 percent of a total of 299 DoD procurement functions. The remaining 55 percent would be accomplished through modifications to the commercial product. As of December 2000, DoD had deployed four versions of SPS, through version 4.1.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 13, 2001
- Accession Number
- ADA387945
Entities
Organizations
- Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Department of Defense