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Presented ByScott Allan SmithCommercial Director
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3. BiP & Moorhouse
BiP and Planet
Not always easyBiP & Moorhouse
BiP and Planet
Not always easy
4. BiP in the Public Sector Formed in 1984,
220 personnel at Pacific Quay Glasgow, 25 in London
Public sector procurement information and services
Clients across UK, Europe, Middle East and Africa
5. Our Expertise Business Intelligence Services
e-Sourcing
Procurement Consultancy
Procurement Training
Buyer and Supplier Engagement
Capacity building for buyers and suppliers
6. BiP Projects Delivering procurement services across the UK, Europe, Africa and Middle East:
Over 80,000 suppliers registered with our Tendermatch services
550 Awarding Authorities use our Delta e-Sourcing suite
UK Ministry of Defence www.contracts.mod.uk
Olympic Delivery Authority www.competefor.com
National lower value opportunities portal www.supply2.gov.uk
European Defence Agency Pan European study
European Commission Montenegro & Kosovo
World Bank Ministry of Education ion in Kenya
7. Know The Rules Financial Thresholds
Timescales
Procedure Types
Open, Restricted, Negotiated, Competitive Dialogue
Nature
Works, Services, Supplies
8. Know The Rules
9. Building Relationships Understand Buyers Communication policy
Tele-calls, face to face meetings, briefings
Understand the problem and position your organisation as the solution
Get to know the organisation(s) your are targeting
Look at their Buyer Profile
Are they members of a Procurement Consortium People Buy from People
10. Winning & Learning Experiences
Use the experience gained to improve
Ensure that you obtain a de-brief even if you win
Find out where the winning bid was stronger
Establish what your strengths were relative to the winner
Consider sub-contracting opportunities if you dont win
11. Partnering for Success Establish if you need a partner
There is no magic formula for finding the correct partner
Use your networks, just pick up the phone and ask
Establish if there is a technical and commercial fit between your organisations
Is there Chemistry Can you work together
Do you trust each other
12. Positioning Your Innovation
What separates you from the other bidders
In the bid you submit
Ensure that you sell your innovation
In the service or product you offer
What long term legacy are you delivering
In the commercial model / pricing structure
Consider rebates and discounts, risk and reward
In The KPIs you suggest
Introduce additional KPIs
13. A Question of Risk Risk is defined as uncertainty of outcome, whether positive opportunity or negative threat.
In the area of contract management, the term management of risk incorporates all the activities required to identify and control risks that may have an impact on a contract being fulfilled.
Identify where the risk or perceived risk may lie in your bid
Explain how you will eliminate or reduce
14. Make the Most of your information Examine and improve your processes and information
Ensure you can access easily
There tools available to help you achieve this
Spend the quality time telling your story, not looking for the information
15. Tenderers Common Mistakes Failure to understand the service and/or specification
Non-compliance (e.g. with the specification, contract terms)
Pad out bid with documents to make it look good
Dont show experience of similar work
Tender doesnt hang together (incoherent sections lumped together) suggests your company could be similar!
Dont attend Tenderer briefing sessions
Leaving things to the last minute/poor planning
16. Tenderers Common Mistakes Not answering all of the Questions or addressing all of the issues
Tender doesnt identify and address risk
Failing to align responses to the Award Criteria
No Added Value provided
Innovation not used to increase Value for Money
Tender doesnt show how and why it is the MEAT
17. Basic Tips Preparation: maintain a database of the basic information likely to be requested in ITTs
Copy all documentation and store the originals safely request an electronic version if not provided
Deploy the tender team identified at EoI stage - include a member of each relevant department (never do it alone).
Prepare a Bid Strategy analyse your competition, prospect of winning, determine resource/opportunity cost implications.
Determine if you can win withdraw if you cannot.
18. Do not presume that the ITT is infallible
Be compliant: Non-compliant responses will more than likely be rejected Ask questions!
Keep track of any ITT amendments (results of Clarification Questions)
Monitor progress against a tender checklist
Check commercial and contractual aspects warranties, insurance, guarantees, performance indicators, service level agreements, social/employment issues etc Basic Tips
19. Basic Tips Check payment schedules consider cash flow issues
Ensure you have authority to bind your business to your Tender
Ensure parent guarantees, if required, are secured in time
Attend Authoritys Tender briefing sessions Ask questions!
Allow time for Red Teaming of the Tender
Review your final proposal against your checklist to ensure all issues are addressed
20. Time to Win Identify opportunities
Participate in tenders
Register on contract information and supplier portals
e.g. www.competefor.com, www.glasgow2014.com, www.supply2.gov.uk, www.contracts.mod.uk
Make yourself known to awarding authorities through relevant and appropriate PR and case studies
Use your experiences to learn and improve
We have 4 workshops running 12:00 to 14:00 on bidding best practice. We hope to see you there