General contractors subcontract 80–90% of project work. Your subcontractors and suppliers determine whether you deliver on time, on budget, and safely.
Prequalification screens vendors before they bid, ensuring only capable firms compete. A robust prequal process prevents 80% of vendor performance problems.
Verify general liability ($1M+ per occurrence), auto liability, workers' comp, umbrella/excess coverage, and professional liability for design-build. Confirm your company is named as additional insured. Check policy expiration dates and ensure coverage matches project duration.
Require a surety letter confirming single project and aggregate bonding capacity. For projects over $500K, require payment and performance bonds. Verify the surety company is rated A or better by A.M. Best. Bonding capacity also serves as a proxy for financial health.
Collect the Experience Modification Rate (EMR) — a score below 1.0 indicates better-than-average safety. Review OSHA 300 logs for the past 3 years. Check for serious citations. An EMR above 1.2 is a red flag; above 1.5 should be disqualifying for most projects.
Request audited financial statements for the past 2–3 years. Calculate key ratios: current ratio (should be above 1.3), debt-to-equity (below 3.0), and working capital. For critical subs, use Dun & Bradstreet or similar commercial credit reports.
Verify completed projects of similar type, size, and complexity within the past 5 years. Require at least 3 project references with contact information. Check licensing and certifications specific to the trade. For specialty work, verify key personnel qualifications.
Check for active litigation, liens filed against the vendor, licensing violations, and OSHA citations. Verify compliance with prevailing wage requirements, minority/disadvantaged business certifications (if applicable), and any owner-specific requirements.
A structured scorecard measures vendor performance across five dimensions. Score quarterly during the project and after closeout for the final record.
| Dimension | Weight | Key Metrics | Score 5 (Excellent) | Score 1 (Poor) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quality | 25% | Defect rate, rework %, punch list items, spec compliance | Zero rework, exceeds spec | Chronic defects, failed inspections |
| Schedule | 25% | On-time milestones, daily manpower, mobilization speed | Ahead of schedule, proactive | Chronic delays, missed milestones |
| Commercial | 20% | Budget accuracy, change order frequency, billing accuracy | Within budget, clean billing | Constant extras, inflated claims |
| Communication | 15% | Responsiveness, RFI quality, documentation, coordination | Same-day response, thorough | Unresponsive, poor documentation |
| Safety | 15% | Incident rate, toolbox talks, PPE compliance, near-miss reporting | Zero incidents, safety leader | Recordable injuries, violations |
A well-maintained vendor database is your competitive advantage. It ensures you always know who to call, what they can do, and how they have performed.
Consolidate vendor information into a single system: contact details, trade classifications (CSI codes), service areas, capacity, insurance expiration dates, bonding limits, and historical performance scores. Eliminate tribal knowledge trapped in individual project managers' heads.
Tag vendors by primary and secondary trades, project types (commercial, industrial, residential, heavy civil), size capacity (projects under $500K, $500K–$5M, $5M+), and geographic coverage. This enables fast, targeted bid list creation for any project.
Set alerts for expiring insurance certificates, bond renewals, license expirations, and safety certifications. Automatically flag vendors who fall out of compliance. No vendor should be invited to bid with expired coverage.
Record every bid invitation, response rate, bid amount, and award outcome. Vendors who consistently bid 30%+ above the mean may not be a good fit. Vendors who never respond should be flagged or removed. Aim for bid lists with 70%+ response rates.
Run an annual review of all vendors. Remove inactive vendors (no bids in 2+ years), vendors with consistently poor scores, and vendors who have gone out of business. Add new vendors through a controlled onboarding process. Keep the database current and actionable.
Not all vendors carry equal risk. Tier your vendor management intensity based on the criticality of the scope and the vendor's risk profile.
Vendors on the critical path or with large contract values ($1M+). Includes structural steel, mechanical, electrical, and envelope contractors. Require full prequalification, monthly scorecard reviews, dedicated project oversight, and contingency plans if they fail.
Vendors with significant scope but not on the critical path. Includes interior finishes, sitework, and specialty trades. Require standard prequalification, quarterly scorecard reviews, and regular coordination. Monitor for early warning signs of performance issues.
Small-scope vendors and material suppliers with easily substitutable work. Includes cleaning, fencing, temporary facilities, and commodity materials. Require basic prequalification and post-project scoring. Manage by exception rather than proactive oversight.
The best GCs do not just evaluate vendors — they develop them. A vendor development program builds a stronger supply base over time.
Share scorecard results with vendors quarterly. Specific, data-driven feedback drives improvement. Vendors who know they are being measured perform 15–20% better on key metrics than those who are not tracked, according to CII research.
Pair underperforming vendors with your safety team for targeted training. Cover site-specific hazards, your safety program expectations, and incident reporting. Many small subs lack formal safety programs — your guidance can prevent injuries and reduce your own project risk.
Involve preferred vendors early in preconstruction. Their field knowledge improves constructability, value engineering, and schedule planning. Early engagement also builds loyalty and ensures your best vendors prioritize your projects when their backlog is full.
For top-performing vendors, offer multi-project commitments or master service agreements. Guaranteed volume gives them planning certainty and pricing leverage, and gives you reliable capacity and priority scheduling. Both parties benefit from reduced procurement overhead.