Understanding the Tender Document
Before writing a single word of your response, you must thoroughly understand what the buyer is asking for. The Invitation to Tender (ITT) or Request for Proposal (RFP) is your roadmap to a winning bid. Read the entire document at least twice — once for overall understanding and once for detail.
Pay close attention to the specification of requirements, evaluation criteria and weightings, mandatory requirements versus desirable criteria, submission instructions and deadlines, and any clarification procedures. Many bidders lose marks simply because they failed to read the tender document carefully. The buyer has spent considerable time crafting the requirements — respect that by addressing every point they raise.
Building a Compliance Matrix
A compliance matrix is your most important planning tool. Create a spreadsheet that maps every requirement in the tender to your response. For each requirement, note the section reference from the tender document, the specific requirement or question, whether it is mandatory or scored, the evaluation weighting if provided, your response location, and the status of your draft.
This matrix serves two purposes: it ensures you address every requirement (missing a mandatory requirement is usually an automatic fail), and it helps you allocate effort proportionally to the marks available. If quality methodology carries 40% of the marks, it deserves significantly more attention than a section worth 5%.
Decoding Evaluation Criteria
Public sector buyers typically evaluate tenders using one of several frameworks. The Most Economically Advantageous Tender (MEAT) approach balances price against quality, with weightings disclosed in the tender documentation. Common splits include 60/40 quality-to-price, 70/30, or even 80/20 for complex services.
Understanding the scoring methodology is essential. If the buyer uses a 0-5 scoring scale, understand what differentiates a score of 3 (acceptable) from a score of 5 (excellent). Typically, a score of 5 requires evidence of added value, innovation, and exceeding the minimum requirements. Target a 5 on every scored question — settling for "good enough" rarely wins contracts.
Price evaluation usually follows a formula. The most common is the lowest price receiving maximum marks, with other bids scored proportionally. This means if the lowest bid is 100,000 and yours is 120,000, you lose 20% of the available price marks. Calculate whether your quality scores can compensate for a higher price before finalising your pricing strategy.
Structuring Your Response
Follow the structure specified in the tender document exactly. If the buyer provides a response template, use it without modification. If they specify section numbering, mirror it precisely. Evaluators often score multiple bids in a single session — making your response easy to navigate directly impacts your scores.
Each response section should follow a clear pattern: start with a brief summary of your understanding of the requirement, then detail your proposed approach, provide evidence of your capability (case studies, qualifications, metrics), and conclude with the specific benefits to the buyer. This structure — understand, propose, evidence, benefit — consistently scores well across evaluation frameworks.
Writing an Effective Executive Summary
The executive summary is often the most-read section of your bid, yet many suppliers treat it as an afterthought. Write it last, after all other sections are complete, but give it significant attention. A strong executive summary should demonstrate your understanding of the buyer's challenges and objectives, highlight your key differentiators and unique value proposition, summarise your proposed approach in compelling terms, reference measurable outcomes from similar contracts, and convey enthusiasm and commitment to the contract.
Keep the executive summary concise — typically one to two pages. Avoid generic corporate boilerplate. Every sentence should be relevant to this specific opportunity and this specific buyer.
Crafting Method Statements
Method statements are where most marks are won or lost. The buyer wants to understand exactly how you will deliver the contract, not just what you will deliver. Strong method statements are specific, not generic — they reference the buyer's context, locations, and requirements by name.
Structure each method statement around the who, what, when, where, and how of delivery. Include named personnel with relevant qualifications and experience. Provide realistic timelines with milestones. Describe your quality assurance processes, risk mitigation strategies, and escalation procedures. Use diagrams, flowcharts, and tables to break up dense text and illustrate processes visually.
The most common weakness in method statements is vagueness. Phrases like "we will ensure high quality" or "our experienced team will deliver" score poorly because they could apply to any supplier. Instead, specify exactly what quality metrics you will track, what tools you will use, and what experience your named individuals bring.
Pricing Strategy
Your pricing must be competitive while remaining commercially viable. Start by building your costs from the ground up — labour, materials, overheads, risk contingency, and margin. Then stress-test your price against the market. If you have intelligence on likely competitor pricing, use it. If not, consider what the buyer's current spend is (often available through FOI requests or contract award notices).
Be cautious with abnormally low pricing. Many public sector frameworks include mechanisms to reject bids that appear unsustainably cheap, and winning a contract at a loss is worse than not winning at all. Conversely, ensure your pricing is transparent and easy for evaluators to understand. Hidden costs or unclear pricing structures create doubt and reduce scores.
Consider strategic pricing approaches such as front-loading mobilisation costs if cash flow is a concern, offering volume discounts for larger call-off orders, or proposing gainshare mechanisms where efficiency savings are shared with the buyer.
Social Value and Added Value
Social value has become an increasingly significant evaluation criterion, particularly in UK and EU procurement. Many tenders now allocate 10-20% of the total score to social value commitments. Develop a genuine social value strategy that aligns with your business capabilities and the buyer's priorities.
Effective social value commitments include local employment and apprenticeship creation, supply chain opportunities for SMEs and social enterprises, environmental sustainability measures with measurable targets, community engagement and skills development programmes, and diversity and inclusion initiatives. Make your commitments specific and measurable. "We will create two apprenticeship positions within 6 months of contract start" is far more compelling than "we are committed to supporting local employment."
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Years of bid evaluation reveal consistent patterns in losing submissions. Avoid these critical errors: failing to answer the specific question asked (surprisingly common — many bidders provide generic company information instead of addressing the requirement), exceeding word or page limits (your response may be cut off or marked down), making claims without evidence (every claim of capability should be supported by a specific example), using boilerplate text from previous bids without tailoring it to this opportunity, submitting late (there are no exceptions in public procurement — even one minute late means rejection), ignoring the buyer's terminology (use their language, not yours), and poor formatting that makes the response difficult to read and evaluate.
The Submission Checklist
In the 48 hours before submission, work through a rigorous checklist. Verify that all mandatory documents are included and correctly formatted. Confirm that your response addresses every requirement in your compliance matrix. Check that all declarations are signed by authorised personnel. Ensure pricing is complete, mathematically correct, and in the required format. Verify that file sizes meet portal upload limits. Have someone who was not involved in writing the bid read it fresh for clarity and errors.
Submit at least 24 hours before the deadline whenever possible. Portal systems can experience heavy traffic near deadlines, and technical issues are not accepted as valid reasons for late submission. After submitting, save a copy of everything you submitted, including timestamps, as a record.
After Submission: Continuous Improvement
Whether you win or lose, always request feedback from the buyer. In most public procurement frameworks, buyers are legally required to provide debrief information. Analyse this feedback systematically — what scored well, what scored poorly, and what the winning bidder offered that you did not. Maintain a lessons-learned log across all your bids to identify patterns and continuously improve your win rate.