A. Construction Technology & Environmental Services (10 Questions)
1. Q: What factors do you consider when assessing the buildability of a design?
A: Access, sequencing, temporary works, interfaces, material availability, logistics and the impact on programme, safety, and cost.
2. Q: How do construction methods affect commercial outcomes?
A: Methods influence productivity, preliminaries, risk allowances, waste, and design coordination; the right method can reduce cost and programme risk.
3. Q: Explain the difference between traditional and modular construction from a commercial viewpoint.
A: Modular has higher upfront manufacturing costs but reduced preliminaries, faster programme, fewer on-site labour risks, and potential quality improvements.
4. Q: How do you assess environmental constraints when pricing a project?
A: Consider environmental permits, waste management, ecological surveys, acoustic restrictions, contaminated land costs, and sustainability requirements.
5. Q: How can value engineering impact the commercial strategy?
A: It can reduce cost while maintaining function, but requires careful risk assessment to avoid long-term performance or warranty issues.
6. Q: What is life-cycle costing and when is it used?
A: Whole-life comparison of CapEx vs OpEx; used during early design to support selection of materials/systems with long-term efficiency.
7. Q: How do you manage temporary works commercially?
A: Include in prelims or package rates, define responsibility, ensure adequate allowances, and manage changes through early engagement.
8. Q: What environmental requirements commonly affect preliminaries?
A: Noise restrictions, dust control, waste management facilities, sustainability reporting, and site environmental management roles.
9. Q: How do you ensure compliance with sustainability specifications?
A: Review employer requirements, coordinate with design, monitor material sourcing, track KPIs such as BREEAM credits, and obtain evidence.
10. Q: How could using low-carbon materials impact commercial outcomes?
A: Typically higher material cost, but may reduce environmental levy risks, attract credits, reduce programme in some cases, and support planning obligations.
B. Procurement & Tendering (12 Questions)
11. Q: Describe the key steps in a procurement strategy.
A: Identify objectives, analyse constraints, assess market, evaluate routes, assign risk, define tender list, produce tender documentation.
12. Q: What procurement route do you prefer and why?
A: Depends on project: D&B for cost/ programme certainty; Traditional for design control; CM for complex fast-track projects.
13. Q: How do you evaluate tender submissions?
A: Check compliance, price breakdowns, programme, methodology, exclusions, risk allowances, and commercial clarifications.
14. Q: What is two-stage tendering and when is it appropriate?
A: Early contractor appointment for design involvement with later fixed pricing; good for complex projects needing early input.
15. Q: How do you manage tender queries?
A: Log, track, issue consolidated clarifications, ensure equal treatment and avoid giving competitive advantage.
16. Q: What is abnormally low tender analysis?
A: Identify unsustainable pricing by comparing benchmarks, breakdowns, productivity and supply chain evidence.
17. Q: What are the risks of lowest-price tendering?
A: Increased variations, disputes, quality issues, insolvency risk, and programme delays.
18. Q: How do you ensure transparency in competitive tendering?
A: Standard templates, equal access to information, recorded clarifications, signed tender reports.
19. Q: What is MEAT?
A: Most Economically Advantageous Tender – weighted criteria including quality, methodology, environment, and price.
20. Q: How do you carry out supply chain engagement?
A: Market testing, RFI, prequalification, performance history checks, financial assessments.
21. Q: What is the purpose of a tender reconciliation?
A: Identify scope gaps, overlaps, exclusions, pricing anomalies and ensure tenders are aligned before recommendation.
22. Q: Why might you use framework procurement?
A: Faster appointment, pre-vetted contractors, fixed margins/rates, predictable performance.
C. Contract Practice (12 Questions)
23. Q: Compare JCT D&B and NEC4 ECC Option A.
A: JCT: risk transfer, design responsibility, reactive change control. NEC: proactive management, collaborative, compensation events.
24. Q: What is a contract condition precedent?
A: A requirement that must be satisfied before entitlement (e.g., notifying change within time limit).
25. Q: Explain the difference between provisional sums and prime cost items.
A: PS: uncertain work; PC: allowance for supply of materials/works by specialist.
26. Q: What documents form a construction contract?
A: Articles, conditions, employer’s requirements, contractor’s proposals, drawings, specs, schedules.
27. Q: What is a contractor’s design portion?
A: Transfer of responsibility for specific elements to contractor.
28. Q: Explain the purpose of collateral warranties.
A: Provide third-party rights to funders, tenants, or purchasers.
29. Q: What makes a contract valid?
A: Offer, acceptance, consideration, intention to create legal relations, capacity.
30. Q: Explain liquidated damages (LDs).
A: Pre-agreed losses for delay; must represent genuine pre-estimate, not punitive.
31. Q: What is practical completion?
A: Works completed except minor defects; triggers LDs cessation and release of retention.
32. Q: How are change events handled under NEC vs JCT?
A: NEC uses CE process; JCT uses AIIs, instructions and valuation rules.
33. Q: What are key risks in novation?
A: Design continuity, liability gaps, loss of employer influence, coordination issues.
34. Q: What is the purpose of retention?
A: Encourage performance, protect against defects and incomplete works.
D. Project Financial Control (12 Questions)
35. Q: How do you prepare a cost plan?
A: Assess scope, benchmark data, elemental breakdown, risk allowances, inflation adjustments.
36. Q: How do you manage change control commercially?
A: Maintain change register, validate entitlement, value based on contract rules, update forecast.
37. Q: What is earned value analysis?
A: Measures project performance using cost vs programme metrics (EV, PV, AC).
38. Q: What is the difference between forecast cost and budget?
A: Budget: initial allowance; forecast: updated actual/expected cost based on progress and change.
39. Q: How do you evaluate compensation events?
A: Assess defined costs, time effects, risk allowances, productivity, and evidence.
40. Q: How do you manage cash flow forecasting?
A: Input contract values, programme, payment terms, retention, and expected variations.
41. Q: How do preliminaries impact project cost management?
A: Time-dependent cost; impact of delays or resequencing; assessed based on programme.
42. Q: How do you deal with subcontractor overclaims?
A: Review evidence, measure work done, compare with programme, challenge unsupported items.
43. Q: What contingency methods do you use?
A: % allowances, risk-based bottom-up, Monte Carlo for major risks.
44. Q: What are project financial risks?
A: Incorrect assumptions, design changes, productivity issues, inflation, supply chain insolvency.
45. Q: What is your approach to forecasting final account?
A: Start with original value + agreed change + pending change + risk + claims exposure.
46. Q: How do you validate applications for payment?
A: Measure progress, check against contract rates, verify evidence, apply retention, issue notices.
E. Commercial Reporting (10 Questions)
47. Q: What information is included in a commercial report?
A: CVR, cost to complete, risks, cash flow, change status, key metrics.
48. Q: How do you ensure accuracy in CVRs?
A: Use verified data, align with programme, cross-check with finance, validate subcontractor inputs.
49. Q: What KPIs do you track in commercial management?
A: Margin performance, CVR trends, variation closure rate, cash position, productivity.
50. Q: How do you report cost risk to stakeholders?
A: Use risk registers, confidence ranges, expected value analysis.
51. Q: What is a “cost-value reconciliation”?
A: Comparison of certified value to actual cost to track margin performance.
52. Q: How do you handle cost drift?
A: Identify root cause, implement corrective actions, update budget or mitigate.
53. Q: How do you communicate commercial issues to non-commercial stakeholders?
A: Clear summaries, visuals, impact statements and options.
54. Q: What is commercial governance?
A: Internal review processes: approvals, audit trails, delegated authority.
55. Q: How do you present high-risk commercial positions?
A: Transparent risk, probability/impact, mitigation, recommended actions.
56. Q: What is the importance of early warning?
A: Proactive risk management, opportunity to mitigate cost and time impacts.
F. Risk Management (10 Questions)
57. Q: How do you develop a project risk register?
A: Identify, assess probability/impact, assign owners, monitor mitigation.
58. Q: What are commercial risks in procurement?
A: Market inflation, poor scope definition, contractor insolvency, inadequate bids.
59. Q: How do you quantify risk allowance?
A: Expected value (probability × impact) or range analysis.
60. Q: How do you track mitigation effectiveness?
A: Regular reviews, risk movement logs, updated forecasting.
61. Q: How can design risk affect commercial performance?
A: Late changes increase variations, rework, and programme impact.
62. Q: How do you allocate risk in contracts?
A: Allocate to party best able to manage; avoid transferring unmanageable risk.
63. Q: How do you address inflation risk?
A: Fixed price, indices, escalation clauses, early procurement.
64. Q: What is a quantitative risk analysis?
A: Statistical modelling (e.g., Monte Carlo) to identify cost/time risk ranges.
65. Q: How do you reduce subcontractor insolvency risk?
A: Financial checks, staged payments, performance bonds, retention.
66. Q: How do delays create commercial risk?
A: Increased preliminaries, liquidated damages exposure, supply chain claims.
G. Dispute Avoidance & Resolution (12 Questions)
67. Q: What are common causes of disputes?
A: Poor scope definition, late design, lack of notices, incomplete records.
68. Q: How do you avoid disputes?
A: Good records, communication, early warnings, collaborative workshops.
69. Q: What types of ADR do you know?
A: Mediation, adjudication, negotiation, arbitration.
70. Q: How do you manage claims under NEC?
A: Notify early, submit CE, provide evidence, agree PMI, keep records.
71. Q: What is the importance of notices?
A: Condition precedent; failure removes entitlement.
72. Q: How do you prepare for adjudication?
A: Clear narrative, supporting evidence, programme analysis, expert input.
73. Q: How do you handle unjustified subcontractor claims?
A: Request particulars, evidence, entitlement review, respond formally.
74. Q: What is the difference between a claim and a variation?
A: Variation: employer change; claim: event giving rise to entitlement under contract.
75. Q: What is disruption?
A: Loss of productivity not involving critical delay, usually evidenced by records.
76. Q: How do you evaluate prolongation costs?
A: Based on preliminaries, time-related costs, overheads and proof of causation.
77. Q: What is global claim risk?
A: Claim without linking cause-effect; high risk of rejection.
78. Q: How do you document contemporaneous evidence?
A: Diaries, meeting minutes, site records, progress photos, correspondence.
H. Ethics & Professionalism (10 Questions)
79. Q: Describe the five RICS ethical principles.
A: Act with integrity; always provide a high standard of service; act in a way that promotes trust; treat others with respect; take responsibility.
80. Q: Give an example of an ethical dilemma you faced.
A: E.g., pressure to certify unsupported works; resolved by following evidence and explaining contract obligations.
81. Q: What would you do if a client asked you to manipulate a cost report?
A: Decline, explain ethical duty and contractual obligations, escalate if needed.
82. Q: How do you maintain confidentiality?
A: Limit access, secure storage, follow GDPR, share only on need-to-know basis.
83. Q: What is a conflict of interest?
A: Situation where personal or organisational interests could influence professional judgement.
84. Q: How do you handle gifts or hospitality?
A: Follow corporate policy, declare, ensure transparency and proportionality.
85. Q: What is whistleblowing and when would you use it?
A: Reporting harmful or illegal practices; used when internal processes fail.
86. Q: How do you ensure fairness in procurement?
A: Equal treatment, documented processes, consistent clarifications.
87. Q: What is professional indemnity insurance?
A: Covers liability for professional negligence.
88. Q: Why is acting with integrity important?
A: Maintains public trust, reduces disputes, upholds professional reputation.
I. Personal & Project Experience (12 Questions)
89. Q: Describe your most significant commercial challenge.
A: Explain context, actions, contract knowledge used, and outcome.
90. Q: How do you prioritise competing commercial tasks?
A: Assess urgency/impact, stakeholder needs, risk exposure, resource delegation.
91. Q: Describe a time you improved commercial performance.
A: Example: re-baselining forecast, negotiating subcontract re-rates.
92. Q: How do you manage relationships with subcontractors?
A: Open communication, fair evaluation, timely payments, clear expectations.
93. Q: Describe an example of leading a negotiation.
A: Prepare facts, know BATNA, structured discussions, agreed outcomes.
94. Q: How do you ensure high-quality record keeping?
A: Standard templates, daily logs, document control systems.
95. Q: Describe a time you identified a major risk early.
A: How you quantified it, mitigated it and communicated it.
96. Q: What is your role in managing programme impacts?
A: Validate delay events, work with planner, assess costs, issue notices.
97. Q: What is the most important lesson you learned during your APC?
A: Example: importance of notices, early engagement, or robust evidence.
98. Q: How do you handle pressure in peak commercial periods?
A: Structured methods, prioritisation, communication, early planning.
99. Q: Why should RICS award you MRICS status?
A: Demonstrated competency, ethical standards, commitment to excellence.
100. Q: What are your career ambitions post-MRICS?
A: Senior commercial manager, development of teams, contribution to industry standards.
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