Negotiation

The Negotiation document is used to establish and maintain records associated with negotiations associated with pertaining awards, and related agreements.  This data serves as reference information that is made available for display and selection in various areas of the system.  Activities and attachment documents related to the negotiations can be tracked and preserved as historical reference information.

This topic covers the following sections:  Overview; Completion Process; Flow Diagram; and Routing and Status.

Business Needs and Purpose

Policy

Roles and Responsibilities

Permissions

Document Layout

Introduction

Scope

Before You Begin

Navigation Path

Document Status

Workflow Status

It is followed by subtopics containing detailed documentation on each page, section, subsection and field for this e-doc.

      Negotiation

      Custom Data

      Activities & Attachments

      Medusa

Before you start to use the Negotiation document, it is important to have a basic understanding of the context of its use and why it is important.

It is also helpful for you to understand the trigger or circumstance that initiates the need to use the functions of the Negotiation document, and the fundamentals of its life cycle – when it is required, who completes it, its routing, etc.

Business Needs and Purpose

The Negotiation document is completed whenever:

      you need to create or maintain an electronic record of negotiation information pertaining to existing or potential research, material transfer, and/or non-disclosure agreements

      you need to create a negotiation from an Award, a Proposal Log or an Institutional Proposal

The Negotiation document is used to:

      establish, maintain, print and permanently store an electronic record of information regarding negotiations with existing or potential sponsor agencies for research award grants

      associate Negotiation documents with Awards, Subawards, Proposal Logs, or Institutional Proposal documents

Policy

The policy statement that pertains to this activity is:

      Users without a role of Negotiator, Negotiation Administrator, or OSP Administrator (as qualified based on the unit hierarchy) are not permitted to view the Activity Description (comment) or attachments associated with an activity that is designated “OSP Only”

Roles and Responsibilities

The primary responsibilities for each actor in this procedure are:

      The Negotiator is responsible for administration of the negotiation, and can:

      create (new) & edit (modify existing)

      The Researcher can:

      perform a Negotiation lookup

      view and print Negotiations

      The Unit Administrator:

      can view general details and negotiation attributes

      cannot view when restricted to OSP Only

      cannot print when restricted to OSP Only

      The OSP Administrator can:

      view and print when unrestricted

The generic actor  Negotiator in this procedure may refer to any the following equivalent applicable job titles:

      Negotiation Administrator

      Central Administrator

      OSP Administrator

      Contract Administrator

      Lead Unit Administrator

      Financial Administrator

 

Figure 423  Negotiation Negotiator Role – Name and Description

 

Figure 424  Negotiation Investigators (Derived Role) – Names and Descriptions

Permissions

Figure 425  Negotiation Document – Permission Names and Descriptions by Role

 

Document Layout

The Negotiation document is comprised of a header area, one tabbed page (labeled ‘Negotiation’), and an action button area.

Figure 426 Negotiation Dcoument – Standard & Unique E-Doc Components Overview

Table 196 Negotiation Document - Major Components Overview

Major Document Component

Summarized Description

Header area

Document identification information at the top, right of the document containing both common and document-specific fields.

Tabbed Pages

Pages that make up the document which are accessible by clicking the folder tab for each.  These are groupings of functionally related information for the purpose of display and collection and are generally designed to be completed in left-to-right order.

Tabbed Page Sections

Multiple tabbed sections of each page containing data entry/selection/display fields that are expandable/collapsable via hide/show buttons.  Some sections contain subsections – the labels for which are highlighted in a darker shade of grey.

Action Buttons

Buttons that appear at the bottom, center of the document (regardless of page), some of which are common to all e-docs, and some of which are unique to this particular document.

 

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For more information about e-doc component features that are common to all e-docs, see “E-Doc Topology” on page Error! Bookmark not defined. in E-Doc Fundamentals.

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For more information about e-doc component features that are unique to the Negotiation e-doc, see the appropriate corresponding subtopics for each page and section below.

Introduction

 

You complete the Negotiation E-Doc when you need to record and track negotiations you have on behalf of researchers as an administrator because you are working with sponsors (or potential sponsors) to obtain awards of contracts or grants for research; or you are representing researchers in fulfilling reporting requirements to sponsor agencies.

Scope

This procedure covers:

      Creating a new Negotiation document

      Adding an activity (with attachment) to a Negotiaion document

Before You Begin

Before you begin this procedure, you will first need the following:

      Access:  you must have appropriate permissions in KC to create and edit Negotiation documents

      Time:  the approximate time to complete a work-in-progress and save it as a draft for future revision is 15 minutes or less

      Pre-existing Conditions / Prerequisite Tasks: There are no required records (existing data or documents) that need to be in place first in order to complete this, however, when associating with another e-doc (such as an Award), that record must exist in KC, and when adding attachments, the files must reside on your local computer drive.  Otherwise there are no tasks that must be completed prior to initiating this activity.

Navigation Path

Getting started – this quick system reference depicts how to access the start screen for this procedure.  The process task steps in the ordered list below assume you will be creating a new Negotiaion document.

Create New:

 >  >  (unique Doc Nbr. created)

 > > (unique Doc Nbr. created)

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For more information on creating a new document, see “Initiating a Document” on page 108 in Common E-Doc Procedures.

Access Existing:

doc search.jpg>> enter/select criteria >search.jpg>

or…

action list.jpg > >

or…

 >  > >

 >  >  >

 

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For more information on accessing an existing document using the global doc search button, see “Searching for a Document” on page 115 in Common E-Doc Procedures.

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For more information on accessing an existing document using the global action list button, see “Using the Action List” on page 117 in Common E-Doc Procedures.

 

 

To create a new Negotiation document:

1.

Make selections and/or entries for all required (*) fields in the Negotiation subsection.

    Description

    Negotiation Status

    Negotiator

    Agreement Type

    Negotiation Association Type

 

link.png  For detailed descriptions of acceptable input for each individual field, refer to “Negotiation” on page 448.

2.

Based on your Association Type field selection, use the document lookup  that appears to the right of the field to search for, select and return the desired document to associate the negotiation with (Institutional Proposal, Proposal Log, Award or Subaward).

The Negotiation Attributes subsection automatically displays key information about the selected document.

tip.png  Upon save, the hierarchical tree and summary view in the Medusa section is also populated accordingly.

3.

Make selections and/or entries for optional fields in the Negotiation section as desired.

4.

If your institution has made Custom Data fields mandatory as part of the way they have chosen to customize their implementation of KC, complete the fields in this section as necessary.

5.

Click the save button.

The status of the document changes from INITIATED to ENROUTE, and since you have completed the minimum amount required for saving, you can now close the document ‘draft’ and retrieve it for future revision.

 End of activity.

 

 

To add an Activity (with Attachment) to a Negotiation document:

1.

Expand the Add Activity subsection of the Activities & Attachments section by clicking the show  button.

2.

Make selections and/or entries to the required (*) fields in the Add Activity subsection.

    Location

    Activity Start Date

    Activity Description

    Activity Type

link.png  For detailed descriptions of acceptable input for each individual field, and usage of the restrict/unrestrict buttons, refer to  “Add Activity” on page 450.

3.

Click the Browse…button to select and upload the file you want to attach, enter a description in the Description field, and then click the add  button.

Your file is added as a numbered line item row, and the filename is displayed in the File column .

4.

Click the add activity  button.

Your activity now appears as a collapsed subsection under Activities, named according to start date and type (for example ), and showing all fields.

Additionally, your activity addition appears as a numbered line item row in the Activity/Location History subsection, showing key information in columns with report export options.

Your attachment appears in the sortable All Attachments subsection as a sequentially numbered line item row.

5.

Click the save button.

The status of the document changes from ENROUTE to FINAL, but may be modified.

 End of activity.

 

 

 

Figure 427 Negotiation Document – Create New Process Flow Chart Diagram

Figure 428 Negotiation Document – Add Activity (w/Attachment) Process Flow Chart Diagram

The Negotiation document itself does not route for approval.

Document Status

Document-specific status generally relates to completion-related actions – the states of the document while it is in the process of being prepared prior to submission for approval. 

The Negotiation document’s status changes throughout its lifecycle as follows:

 

Table 197 Negotiation Document-Specific Status Descriptions

Document-Specific Status

Description

In Process

Default for new.  Can be made active or inactive.

Complete

Can be made active or inactive.

Suspended

When selected, results in automatic population of the Negotiation End Date.  Can be made active or inactive.

Workflow Status

Workflow status generally relates to approval-related actions - the routing of the completed document in the system for approval. 

Even after approval and final disposition actions are completed, a permanent historical record of the Negotiation document is always accessible from within the document itself (Activity/Location History).

Figure 429  Negotiation Document  - Saved Route Log

There is no Route Log functionality for the Negotiation document as there is with most other e-docs, however, the Document Header always displays one of the following:  INITIATED, ENROUTE, or FINAL

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For more information about Workflow (a.k.a. Route) Status changes, see “Route Status” on page 204 in Routing Fundamentals.

The high-level procedural information provided in this topic is supported by related documentation topics that provide additional detail.

Common E-Doc Procedures:

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For information about searching for, initiating, saving, modifying and submitting e-docs, see “Common E-Doc Procedures” on page 108 in Overview.

The subtopics that follow provide information about how to use each page and/or section of this e-doc, with field description tables for each field and screen shots depicting example input.

 

Subtopics:

Negotiation