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Developing Your Bidding Strategy for Public Sector Tenders

Bidding strategy meeting

Bidding for public sector contracts is a crucial part of expanding your business and growing your revenue. However, without a sound bidding strategy you may struggle to produce competitive and successful tenders.

A strong and well-developed bidding strategy mitigates a disorganised, scattershot approach when tendering for public sector contracts while also maximising your chances of a successful bid and a contract award.

Due diligence on tender opportunities

Completing initial checks and due diligence on specific bidding opportunities is central to a strong and informed bidding strategy. Central and local government authorities publish government contracts and government tenders on two websites – Contracts Finder, for contracts of a slightly lower value, and Find a Tender, for larger or more lucrative contracts.

In the invitation to tender (ITT) document for each tender, you will find the following details:

By making note of the above, you will be able to make an informed decision on whether or not to bid.

Make an informed ‘bid/no-bid’ decision

. As part of your bid/no-bid decision, read all documents in the tender pack in full and consider if your organisation can meet the following:

After making the decision to submit a bid, it is crucial to move quickly – most tenders only have a four- to six-week window from release of a contract notice to the submission deadline. Consequently, it is also crucial to be proactive in implementing an established bid pipeline, particularly for important contracts or framework agreements.

Align tender responses with the buyer’s priorities

Many infrequent bidders believe all tenders are the same, and once you have completed one submission this material can be copied and pasted for all relevant tender responses. While there can be efficiencies from previous bid material on file – particularly contract examples or case studies – each tender is different, and each buyer will have different priority areas for an individual contract. Giving due attention to these priority areas is crucial to creating a winning bidding strategy.

As an example, most quality elements of a bid will include a response around customer care procedures. However, the priority areas or emphasis may change, and high-scoring responses will ensure all aspects of the question have been comprehensively addressed. Examples:

Equally, whilst some social value responses will have similar content, each authority usually have their own preferred initiatives and commitments. To gain maximum marks from the evaluator, it is critical your bidding strategy aligns with these individual initiatives.

Implement strong quality assurance processes

Each tender exercise is a competition, and each bid must leverage your organisation’s experience, competency and capability to deliver the works or services to produce the strongest possible submission.  An internal bid manager or senior member of the team should review each element of your submission, verifying the following:

Quality assurance is crucial to a strong bidding strategy and a winning submission. Even the most talented bid writer will benefit from an additional pair of eyes to dissect difficult questions and produce persuasive, evidence-based bid responses. Our bid review service allows clients with an internal bid team to gain feedback on initial drafts of responses, with suggestions for enhancements and improvements ensuring a high-quality, competitive submission.

Support development of your bidding strategy

As part of our bid training courses, we train delegates on how to develop and refine their bidding strategy. This is inclusive of all aspects of the tender process, from sourcing opportunities, making an informed ‘bid/no-bid’ decision and implementing robust bid management processes.

If you would like to learn more about the bid training services we provide, our sales and marketing team are available for a call and a free, no-obligation quotation at info@executivecompass.co.uk or 0800 612 5563.

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