OK, let's play "tick the boxes", shall we? For convenience and clarity, I'll use the terminology "client" and "contractor":-
Contractor must have:-
1 [ ] Competent technicians able to carry out the work
2 [ ] Public liability insurance
3 [ ] "Quality System" certification (
eg, ISO whatever)
4 [ ] Appropriate tools and test equipment
5 [ ] All test equipment calibrated and within date
6 [ ] Recent training certs for all equipment on "the list"
1 - tick
2 - tick
3 - why? It's the
client who should have a QA system in place (and the contractor should be obliged to follow that)
4 - tick
5 - tick
6 - may not be possible for all equipment (some of which may be basic anyway)
Perhaps we're talking about a list of kit that
any biomed worth his salt should be competent to work through. That's why I asked earlier:- "What sort of equipment are we talking about here"?
However, as I've mentioned before, the client can add as many requirements and conditions as he sees fit. But each one will end up costing him more.
And (at the famous "end of the day") he will probably end up with the same blokes doing the work, anyway.
Generally speaking, I don't think it's any great secret that contractors will agree to "anything" as long as the price is right. They carry the risk.
Also, if there is
still lingering doubt about capability
etc. ... why not simply follow that age-old method of seeking references from previous happy clients?
But to my mind all that is just so much
guff. As I said before, what really matters is the condition of the kit!
