Contracting Mechanisms

Consulting and Facilitation Services

Consulting Services (MOBIS #: SIN 874-1)
PHI’s staff advises, assists and counsels U.S. federal, state and other country governments at all organizational levels. For example, PHI works with the U.S. Agency for International Development’s health, population and nutrition sector both in the U.S. and overseas to support the Agency’s organizational and business improvement efforts. PHI has developed and carried out assessments of organizational effectiveness in USAID’s Global Bureau for Health in Washington, D.C.; and in USAID field offices and nonprofit organizations in Africa, Asia, Central America, Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Republics, the Pacific Islands and the Middle East. We have supported presidential appointees’ strategic planning activities, led performance improvement efforts, and implemented leadership systems through more than 100 consultation processes. Evaluations highlight PHI's ability to respond to critical performance needs and create sustainable systems for leadership development and succession. In the labor pricing list, project-specific items such as travel or materials are not included and, if appropriate, should be added to any task order to reflect the requirements of specific tasks.

Facilitation Services (MOBIS #: SIN 874-2)
PHI’s staff is asked to facilitate more than forty conferences, retreats and workshops each year including large international meetings, conferences, office retreats, and multi-agency meetings. For example, PHI has facilitated meetings such as those in support of the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, a joint effort of USAID and the U.S. State Department, and the Implementing Best Practices Consortium, co-sponsored by USAID and the World Health Organization. Facilitation services include initial needs assessments, agenda development, logistical support, organizing technical presentations to maximize learning, supporting problem solving and decision-making activities, internal evaluation, and follow-on activities such as debriefings and reports. In the labor pricing list, project-specific items such as travel or materials are not included and, if appropriate, should be added to any task order to reflect the requirements of specific tasks.

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