Yes, absolutely, there are. Fundamentally, the great thing about having the opportunity to be before the committee is that it brings awareness. Awareness can then also identify additional gaps that others were not aware of.
Training is certainly always part of the answer, and I will suggest that if you talk to procurement practitioners, that is something they're begging for. One of the top three issues we hear from procurement purchasers in government departments is they need additional training. As obligations change or are encountered for the first time, if the proper training is not provided and there isn't a consistent, centralized policy, it's not fair to them to say that they've somehow failed; it's that the integrity of the process has failed them.
