


Index
1. Introduction &
Purpose..
2
2.
Scope..
6
3.
Context 6
4.
What We Mean by Commercial 8
5.
Our Commercial Vision..
9
7.
Commercial Governance Framework..
11
8.
Portfolio Approach (Assets & Investments).
14
9.
Systems, Data, Procurement & Contract Management
14
10.
People, Culture & Commercial Behaviours.
16
11.
Delivery, Monitoring & Success Measures.
18
12.
Handover & Transition Readiness.
19
Appendix. 1 - Our Commercial Framework and
Checklist
Appendix. 2 – Commercial Business Case
Guidance Template
Appendix. 3 – CSO Thresholds
Details
Appendix. 4 – Process Map

1
Introduction & Purpose
1.1
A strong
commercial strategy is essential for ensuring that Spelthorne
Borough Council operates efficiently, sustainably, and in a way
that delivers clear value for money across all
services.
1.2
This includes
embedding a commercial mindset across the organisation, not simply
undertaking commercial activity. It requires a whole organisation,
corporate approach, ensuring decisions consider impacts across all
services and functions.
1.3
Strong
risk management is a core component of our
commercial approach, it strengthens governance, protects public
money and ensures decisions are resilient, transparent and aligned
to organisational priorities. We will systematically identify,
assess and mitigate financial, operational and strategic risks
across all commercial activity. This includes clear ownership of
risks, consistent scoring, proportionate controls, and early
escalation of emerging issues.
1.4
A coherent
commercial approach helps ensure that every service and investment
contributes meaningfully to our commitment to support residents,
businesses, communities, protect key services, and achieve our
ambitions. This aligns with our broader values of sustainability -
environmental, social, and economic and the commitment to putting
residents at the heart of decision-making while ensuring effective
and successful service delivery.
1.5
In this context,
embedding value for money principles across all areas of the
organisation is not optional, it is fundamental to our ability to
deliver on our priorities. The Corporate Plan sets out ambitious
goals across community wellbeing, addressing housing need,
resilience, the environment, and service improvement, and each of
these relies on sound financial stewardship and the careful
management of resources. Ensuring that decisions are made with
commercial awareness strengthens our capacity to navigate financial
challenges while still investing in the services and outcomes that
matter most to residents. A clear commercial strategy provides the
framework that enables this, ensuring that every pound spent makes
a measurable contribution to the lives of our
residents.
1.6
This Strategy
therefore sets out how we will take a consistent, practical and
people focused approach to commercial activity across the Council.
It brings together our existing work into a single, accessible
framework (Fig. 1, page 3) that lays out how we need to think, act
and work commercially, both now, and as we prepare and operate
through transition to the new authority.
1.7
Our approach is grounded in our statutory duties,
our Corporate Plan priorities, and our commitment to social,
environmental and financial sustainability. It supports an intent
to deliver best value and strengthen governance, and ensures the
organisation is positioned effectively
for transfer to the new authority in 2027.
1.8
The coming years will continue to be financially
challenging. Internal and external pressures make it essential that
we maximise income, reduce costs and
manage financial risks in a well-informed way.
1.9
It is important to recognise that commercial activity is a
responsibility shared by everyone across the Council, from the
choices and decisions we make in how we spend money, to the
scrutiny we give to those spending decisions.
1.10
We will take a whole organisation approach to act efficiently and
understand the full costs of delivery, manage contracts better,
strengthen commercial culture, protect and grow core services, and
support borough regeneration.
1.11
Many of the factors laid out in the Corporate
Plan, Improvement & Recovery Plan, (IRP) and Medium-Term
Financial Strategy (MTFS) are directly relevant to the successful
delivery of this strategy. (Fig. 2). It underpins the creation of a
modern council with aligned structures, systems, processes, and
cultural practices.
1.12
This Strategy:
·
Describes the context and financial environment in which the
Council is operating.
·
Sets out a clear and consistent vision for how commercial
decision-making informs council activities that support our
priorities and statutory responsibilities.
·
Defines the core principles that will guide our commercial and
procurement approach.
·
Explains what these principles mean in practical terms for the way
we will work across the organisation.
·
Outlines the measures we will use to monitor progress, assurance,
and overall success.

Fig.1 – Commercial Framework
2.1
This Strategy applies to both statutory and
non-statutory activities carried out by the Council, including
income generation, procurement, contract management, management of
commercial assets, and the systems, skills and behaviours that support good commercial
practice.
3.1
Like many councils, Spelthorne faces a challenging
financial environment. National funding has reduced, while demand
for services continues to rise. To maintain a balanced budget, we
have relied heavily on income generated from our investment
property portfolio. As we move towards transition
to the new authority, it is crucial that the scale, risks and
long-term sustainability of this reliance are clearly understood
and well managed.
3.2
The Medium-Term Financial Strategy (MTFS),
Improvement and Recovery Plan (IRP) and emerging Service Plans
(2026/27) set out the actions required to manage pressures and
ensure readiness for transition. This Strategy describes how a
stronger commercial approach will support these aims.

Fig. 2 – Commercial Strategy
4.1
Being commercial for Spelthorne means balancing
financial purpose with public value.
4.2
It is
fundamentally a mindset, a disciplined, evidence-based way of
thinking and working, rather than a set of standalone commercial
ventures. It also includes having insight into innovation,
understanding emerging opportunities, and recognising when the
market already provides a solution.
4.3
It means balancing financial purpose with
financial value. It is about being thoughtful and opportunity aware
in how we use our resources and deliver services, while retaining
our social value principles and ensuring that our citizens remain
at the heart of everything we do.
4.4
It means taking a
more informed approach to investment, in time, money and capacity,
and making sure those investments provide clear value. To do this
well, we must understand the full and true cost of the services we
deliver. This includes
lifecycle costs, overheads, and the wider organisational impact, ensuring decisions are
not taken in isolation. This helps us make better
choices, avoid hidden costs and unintended consequences of our
actions and ensure that any new activity is viable, affordable and
aligned to our priorities.
4.5
We must
look for opportunities to do things differently,
understand our customers and markets, and ensure our decisions are
informed, compliant, fair and purposeful. This requires adhering
strictly to the Council’s procurement framework, ensuring
that all purchasing activity is conducted through approved and
compliant routes. It involves selecting suppliers through
established processes rather than resorting to informal,
convenience-based purchasing or repeatedly relying on familiar
providers without proper market testing. By following these
principles, the organisation upholds transparency, fairness, and
value for money in all commercial decisions.
4.6
Crucially, being commercial is not only about
generating ideas or spotting opportunities; it is about
understanding the full picture, knowing the true cost of our
services and taking a disciplined, business‑like approach to
turn ideas into action.
5.1
Our vision is to
ensure that a commercially minded approach is applied consistently
and corporately across all council activities, supported by clear
purpose, outcomes and market insight.
5.2
By embedding
consistent, evidence based and value for money thinking across all
services and by upholding strong governance, compliance and
accountability, we will strengthen financial resilience, reduce
risk, and support the reliable delivery of quality services for
residents as we prepare for transition to the new
authority.
6
The Core Principles for our Commercial
Strategy
6.1
These principles
explain how we make decisions, spend money responsibly, and work
with others. They show our commitment to fairness, value for money,
and doing the right thing for people and the environment. They set
the standard for how commercial and procurement activity will be
approached and delivered. We will:
|
Purpose,
Responsibility and Transparency
|
-
Be
clear about purpose and outcomes for every commercial
decision.
|
-
Act
transparently, fairly and ethically in all commercial activity,
complying with procurement rules and public sector
standards.
|
-
Be
clear about roles, responsibilities and expectations, with strong
contract ownership and governance.
|
-
Plan
for change and manage it well with senior level assurance and
proportionate controls.
|
-
Keep
residents and communities at the centre of decision-making;
commercial activity will not distract from statutory
duties.
|
|
Consistency,
Capability and Collaboration
|
-
Apply
a consistent approach across the organisation, reducing variation
and siloed practice.
|
-
Ensure we have
the capacity and capability to deliver commercial activity
effectively.
|
-
Use
the commercial lifecycle to guide all procurement and contract
decisions.
|
-
Work
collaboratively with partners to co‑create and shape
ideas.
|
-
Build
positive supplier relationships that encourage quality and
continuous improvement.
|
-
Build
a trusted brand that is easy for others to work with.
|
|
Value,
Measurement and Learning
|
-
Maximise social
value and support the local economy wherever possible, including
understanding the impact on local businesses.
|
-
Use
data, insight and digital tools to strengthen decision-making and
performance monitoring.
|
-
Ensure
procurement and investment activity is supported by measurable
actions and indicators.
|
-
Promote a
positive, learning culture where contributions are recognised and
celebrated.
|
-
Share
learning openly and champion achievements.
|
|
Financial
and Environmental Responsibility
|
-
Focus
on financial sustainability by increasing income and improving
efficiency.
|
-
Make
environmentally responsible decisions aligned with climate
commitments.
|
-
Resource
opportunities appropriately and assess them using a consistent,
proportionate business case approach with true cost
understanding.
|
|
7
Commercial Governance Framework
Overview
7.1
The commercial
governance framework provides a disciplined andtransparent structure for how
the Council makes decisions involving procurement, contracts,
assets and expenditure. Its purpose is to ensure that every
commercial decision, regardless of scale, is taken in a consistent,
well assured and financially responsible manner. The focus is not
on pursuing speculative opportunities, but on safeguarding public
resources by ensuring decisions remain affordable, compliant with
regulations, and aligned with the Council’s strategic and
statutory responsibilities.
7.2
At the centre of
this framework are clear standards for due diligence, financial
assessment, risk analysis and legal compliance, supported by
reliable systems and accurate data. Defined approval routes ensure
proportionate scrutiny at each stage of the decision-making
process, with senior officers and Members providing oversight and
assurance. This approach ensures that commercial activity is well
controlled, contract management is robust, and commercial risks are
identified and managed appropriately.
7.3
Together, these
arrangements strengthen the Council’s financial stability,
reduce the potential for unmanaged risk, and increase confidence in
the way commercial commitments are made and monitored. The
governance framework therefore reinforces value for money,
regulatory compliance and organisational resilience, supporting
both day-to-day operations and the Council’s preparations for
transition to the new unitary authority.
Detailed Framework
7.4
We will adopt a
clear, consistent and proportionate governance framework (Fig.3)
that ensures all commercial decisions, whether related to
procurement, contracts, assets or expenditure, are taken in a
disciplined, transparent and well assured manner. The focus of this
framework is not on pursuing new commercial opportunities, but on
strengthening decision quality, ensuring compliance, and protecting
public money.
7.5
A standardised
business case and assessment process will apply to all significant
commercial decisions. This will set out mandatory requirements
for:
·
Due diligence
·
Financial assessment and full cost understanding
·
Risk analysis and mitigation planning
·
Legal, procurement and staffing implications
·
Documentation, audit evidence and reporting standards
7.6
Group Heads,
Management Team and Service Committees will provide structured
oversight, ensuring decisions are affordable, aligned with
strategic priorities, compliant with regulations, and supported by
proportionate controls. Defined approval routes and escalation
pathways as laid out in procurement guidelines will ensure higher
risk or higher value decisions receive appropriate scrutiny.
(Appendix 3)
7.7
Instructing
Officers will become the Contract Manager. It will be essential to
undertake regular and transparent reporting to ensure Members,
senior officers and statutory officers have visibility of
performance, compliance and emerging risks. The overall purpose is
to protect the organisation through disciplined stewardship, not
risk taking and ensuring everyone is accountable, with
decision-making at appropriate levels.

Fig 3. Commercial Governance & Decision-making
Framework
8.1
We will manage all the Council’s land and
property assets responsibly: implementing a rationalisation plan to identify disposals,
reducing liabilities, support debt reduction, and focus on assets
that deliver sustainable value. Decisions will be informed by
updated valuations, market intelligence and scenario
modelling.
8.2
Performance will be monitored through consistent
reporting of income and expenditure, lifecycle costs and risks.
Under‑performing
assets will have structured exit strategies that consider
financial, legal and service impacts.
9.1
Our ability to
make sound commercial decisions depends on strong systems, accurate
data and consistent processes. We will therefore prioritise the
reliability, transparency and accessibility of the information that
underpins spending, contract commitments, supplier performance and
asset lifecycles.
9.2
Aligning all
activities with Council Procurement and contract management
requirements will ensure:
·
All procurement activity follows approved, compliant routes,
complying with the Procurement Act 2023
·
Decisions are based on accurate data, market insight and fair
evaluation
·
Off contract or convenience purchasing is actively
prevented
·
Supplier performance is consistently monitored through KPIs,
reviews and documented performance evidence
9.3
Up to date
systems, including contract registers, property and asset
databases, financial monitoring tools and dashboards, will provide
assurance over spend, risk exposure and contractual obligations.
These systems will support early intervention, timely
decision-making and improved organisational control.
9.4
Ensuring all
Council activity is aligned via a consistent approach, processes
and reliable data will be critical for both day-to-day financial
stewardship and for ensuring the organisation is fully prepared for
transition to the new authority.
9.5
Utilising the
standardised commercial toolkit, set out in Appendix 2, will ensure
consistency and support officers in making informed and compliant
decisions, including:
·
Business case template
·
Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and threats (SWOT) analysis
template
·
Risk analysis template
·
Sensitivity testing guidance
·
Market insight checklist
·
Contract management checklist
·
Governance and sign‑off flowchart (Appendix 4)
10.1
We will build a culture where commercial thinking
and commercial behaviours are part of everyday work.
These commercial
behaviours set clear expectations for how every officer and manager
approach spending, procurement, contract management and asset
stewardship. Their purpose is to embed a consistent, disciplined
way of working that prioritises value for money, compliance with
approved processes, evidence-based decisions, and accountability
for outcomes.
10.2
All officers are
expected to apply these behaviours in day-to-day tasks and formal
decisions alike, using reliable data, following the Council’s
procurement and governance requirements, collaborating
constructively across services and with partners, and proactively
managing risks and performance.
10.3
Together, these
behaviours strengthen decision quality, protect public funds, and
ensure that commercial activity supports our statutory duties,
community outcomes, and long-term financial sustainability.
Commercial behaviours will be considered as part
of recruitment and performance management.
10.4
Part of embedding
commercial behaviours means, ensuring instructing officers
(contract managers) have the capacity and capability to deliver
them. Where the instructing officer doesn’t have the required
skillset they should attend training, consider use of external
expertise where applicable. Commercial behaviours include training,
tools, and support to challenge contractors, understand markets,
and apply the commercial lifecycle.
10.5
Accountability
for contract monitoring and performance will be the responsibility
of the contract manager and will be proportionate to level of role
and responsibilities. Where commercial standards are not met,
performance management processes, including disciplinary routes
where appropriate, may be invoked.
10.6
Our expected commercial behaviours from everyone
across the Council are:
|
Behaviour
|
Description
|
|
Value for Money Mindset
|
Actively seeks the best balance of cost, quality
and social value in every decision, avoiding convenience choices
and ensuring resources are used efficiently.
|
|
Evidence Based Decision Making
|
Uses reliable data, financial analysis and insight
to inform decisions, ensuring choices are grounded in fact rather
than assumption.
|
|
Compliance and Professional Discipline
|
Consistently follows procurement rules, governance
standards and approved processes, maintaining strong audit trails
and ethical practice.
|
|
Market and Supplier Awareness
|
Understands market conditions, supplier capability
and cost drivers to ensure decisions are informed, realistic and
commercially sound.
|
|
Customer and Community Focused
Judgement
|
Considers the impact of decisions on residents,
services and statutory duties, ensuring commercial choices support
positive outcomes.
|
|
Collaborative Working
|
Shares information, works constructively across
teams and partners, and supports consistent, joined up decision
making.
|
|
Accountability and Ownership
|
Takes responsibility for the quality, compliance
and delivery of commercial decisions, proactively managing risks
and performance.
|
|
Constructive Challenge
|
Proactively identifies and challenges
non‑compliant, inefficient or non‑commercial practices,
promoting adherence to standards and improving overall decision
quality.
|
|
Continuous Improvement Mindset
|
Actively looks for ways to improve processes,
strengthen controls and learn from experience to enhance the
Council’s commercial maturity.
|
11.1
Delivery of this
strategy will be organised across workstreams covering governance,
procurement, contract management, capability building, systems and
transition readiness. The emphasis throughout will be on consistent
application of standards, improved compliance, and strengthened
financial discipline.
11.2
Progress will be
monitored through:
·
Monthly internal oversight of commercial decisions and controls by
instructing officer, raising any issues with senior
management
·
Quarterly reporting on procurement activity, contract performance,
risks and financial impact
·
Routine contract reviews and portfolio level monitoring of
assets
·
KPIs that track compliance, value for money, risk management and
decision quality will be included with the contract
·
Monitoring must
include regular spend analysis, sensitivity testing outcomes, and
compliance with the commercial lifecycle.
11.3
The Commercial
Business Case Guidance and Template Pack (Appendix 2) will set out
the activities required to embed the new governance framework and
decision-making standards across the organisation. Measures of
success will focus on improved assurance, reduced unmanaged risk,
clearer audit trails, more consistent procurement practice, and
strengthened financial stewardship.
11.4
The Strategy will
be reviewed annually to ensure it remains fit for purpose and that
commercial activity continues to support stability, compliance and
readiness for transfer to the new authority. Ongoing commercial
responsibilities, systems and documentation will be organised in a
way that supports a smooth transition and prevents the transfer of
unmanaged liabilities.
12.1
A significant aspect of this strategy involves
ensuring all commercial functions are transition ready. This
requires the preparation of complete and accurate asset schedules,
liabilities registers, and contract documentation, including key
dates, performance indicators, financial commitments, and
termination or break clause provisions. All commercial processes,
governance arrangements, and ongoing negotiations will need to be
clearly documented so that the new authority has a complete
understanding of the obligations it will inherit.
12.2
The governance framework will extend beyond 2027
to ensure continuity until the new authority is fully ready to
assume commercial responsibilities. This includes a clear handover
model, documentation standards, and defined ownership of commercial
risks.
12.3
Our overarching aim is to leave a clear, orderly,
and well-governed commercial legacy that supports operational
continuity and reduces the risk of any financial or legal surprises
during transition.
Appendix. 1 –Our Commercial Framework and
Checklist
|
1. Our
Strategic Anchor
|
Corporate Plan & Statutory Duties
Everything we do commercially must support:
•
Resident wellbeing
•
Financial resilience
•
Environmental responsibility
•
Strong
communities
•
Safe,
reliable services
This
is the foundation for all commercial activity.
|
|
Key
Consideration:
|
Does this suggestion align to
the Corporate Plan, MTFS & IRP statutory duties?
|
|
2. Our
Commercial Principles
|
These
principles shape how we think and act:
•
Purpose & Outcomes – every decision must have a
clear benefit for residents or services.
•
Value
for Money – we use resources wisely and avoid unnecessary
cost.
•
Consistency – we apply the same high standards across
the organisation.
•
Capacity & Capability – we ensure people have the
skills, tools and support they need.
•
Social
Value & Local Impact – we consider the wider benefits for
our communities and local businesses.
•
Innovation & Insight – we look for better ways of
working and understand our markets.
•
Transparency & Ethics – we follow the rules, act
fairly and maintain public trust.
These
principles guide every stage of the commercial
lifecycle.
|
|
Key
Consideration:
|
Have you referred to the
Strategy and fully considered all the core principles to support
this decision?
|
|
3. Our
Commercial Lifecycle
|
A
clear, structured approach ensures decisions are well informed and
proportionate:
Identify → Assess → Plan → Procure →
Manage → Review
This
lifecycle is adopted for all commercial activity, from small
purchases to major contracts, from identifying a requirement
through to contract termination.
|
|
Key
Consideration:
|
Do you understand how all the
stages of the lifecycle approach for all commercial activity apply
to your suggestion?
|
|
4. Our
Governance & Assurance
|
Strong
governance protects public money and ensures decisions are
sound.
We
will have:
•
Clear
roles and responsibilities
•
Defined thresholds and risk levels using defined risk scoring
methodology
•
Technology and data considerations
•
Change
control processes
•
True
cost understanding
•
Legal
and financial compliance
•
Proportionate oversight from officers and
Members
This
ensures decisions are transparent, affordable and aligned to our
priorities.
|
|
Key
Consideration:
|
Have you referred to the
guidance for each of the listed requirements to ensure compliance
with our governance approach?
|
|
5.
Documentation and Reporting
|
We
will use a standardised toolkit to
ensure commercial activity discipline and consistency across the
organisation:
•
A
clear written record of the decision, rationale and approval
route.
•
A
complete audit trail of evidence, evaluations, market testing and
financial data.
•
Use of
standard templates and governance documentation.
•
Clear
reporting to senior officers, Members and statutory
officers.
Protects the Council by ensuring decisions can withstand
internal and external scrutiny through transparency, auditability
and accountability
|
|
Key
Consideration:
|
Have you used the toolkit,
guidance and templates to ensure all aspects required for
decision-making are included in the business case?
|
|
6. Our
Procurement & Contract Management
|
We
will deliver commercial activity in a disciplined, compliant and
fair way:
-
Approved procurement routes only
-
Clear
evaluation criteria
-
Strong
supplier relationships
-
KPIs
and performance monitoring
-
Contingencies for changes in scope
-
Regular Spend analysis
-
Documented contract management
This
ensures we get the best value and quality for residents.
|
|
Key
Considerations:
|
Have you followed our
procurement policies to ensure compliance?
Are outcome-based specifications clearly defined?
Is supplier evaluation thorough?
|
|
7. Our
Monitoring & Performance
|
We
will track progress and hold ourselves to account
through:
-
KPIs
-
Quarterly reporting
-
Risk
monitoring
-
Audit
trails
-
Portfolio oversight
This
gives assurance that commercial activity is delivering the right
outcomes.
|
|
Key
Consideration:
|
Have you considered all aspects
of monitoring and performance to ensure robust tracking of
outcomes?
|
|
8. Our
Transition Readiness, beyond 2027,
|
We
will ensure the new authority inherits a clear, well-governed
commercial environment:
-
Complete asset schedules
-
Liabilities registers
-
Contract registers
-
Governance continuity
-
Documented processes and decisions
Our
aim is to leave a strong, orderly and transparent commercial
legacy.
|
|
Key
Consideration:
|
Are registers up to date and
documentation standards upheld to ensure smooth transition to the
new authority?
|