Prepare

Learn Institutional Procurement Basics

This stage outlines several factors that may constrain how an institution or its food service management company purchases food.
  • Public & Private
  • FSMC & Self-Operated
Prepare: 
  • Learn Institutional Procurement Basics

Introduction

Food purchasing decisions may be limited or influenced by several factors, including legal constraints, food service management company policies, affiliations with group purchasing organizations, and available vendors. On this page, you can: 

  • Learn about the legal constraints unique to public and private institutions.
  • Learn how employing a food service management model or joining a group purchasing organization may impact your institution’s procurement practices.
  • Learn about the landscape of food vendors.

Keep In Mind:

These concepts help inform each step of procurement decisionmaking, and you may want to return to this section as you work through through the rest of the Toolkit.

Why is it important to learn the basics of institutional procurement?

Grasp Legal Limitations

Whether an institution is public or private will impact the laws, regulations, and rules that the institution’s procurement procedures must comply with.

Assess Flexibility in Purchasing Decisions

Whether an institution uses a food service management company, operates its own food service, and/or participates in a group purchasing organization may also impact its purchasing flexibility.

Develop Tailored Strategies

Understanding existing constraints will help an institution form appropriate strategies to meet its values-based procurement goals.

Guiding Activities


Understand Legal Limitations: Public vs. Private Institutions

Different laws, rules, and restrictions guide the procurement practices of public and private institutions.

Go To Activity

Understand Food Service Management Strategies: Food Service Management Companies vs. Self-Operation

Institutions can either manage their own food operations, as “self-operated” institutions, or outsource some or all of their food operations to a food service management company.

Go To Activity

Understand Purchasing Power: Group Purchasing vs. Individual Purchasing

In addition to choosing whether to work with a management company, an institution may choose to join a group purchasing organization.

Go To Activity

Understand Vendor Types: Values-Based Vendors vs. Traditional Vendors

This Toolkit distinguishes between “values-based vendors” and “traditional vendors.”

Go To Activity