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8 steps to breakdown tender requirements for government contracts

Written by Sophia Rostron | Jan 5, 2016 2:00:00 PM

Now that 2015 has come and gone, construction professionals are focusing attention on the year ahead. If you're interested in doing business with a government agency, there are many steps you can take to understand their needs and market your business as providing attractive, value for money solutions. You'll need to invest time and resources to enter the government market with success. And you're in luck, because we've talked with procurement officers from Queensland's Department of State Development, Infrastructure and Planning and asked more about tendering for the State and Federal Government.

So why is now the perfect time brush up on how you should read a government tender? Because contractors are saying that "things are getting better" and that the number of construction approvals is rising. In New South Wales especially, authorities approved more than 90,000 applications in the year to June to a total $34 billion worth, said the NSW Local Development Performance Monitor. 

Watpac chief executive Martin Monro recently stated that the NSW pipeline 'is just as healthy for future forward work as I have seen in a decade and while residential construction is strong, it's not just one sector – there are a lot of educational, retail and transport projects gaining approval.'

So when you've identified an opportunity to supply to the Australian Government, the next step is to compete for the business. Of course there is no guarantee of success when competing for any business, but there are some basic rules and better practices that will help to ensure your bid for government work has the possible chance of success. It is absolutely vital that you pay careful attention to the requirements set out in the tender documentation. 

To help get you started, use the following process to break down the tender and get the information you need. 

1. Highlight all of the WILLs, SHALLs and MUSTs in the specifications

Can you deliver what is asked? 

Yes = move onto step 2

No = rethink your submission, do you need to partner or can you submit an alternative tender (if so contact the procurement officer)

 

2. Identify if you need more information to quote effectively

Go back through the specifications taking the time to identify any specifications where you need more information to provide a good response, or any specifications that are ambiguous and need clarification.

Send all of the questions/clarification to the procurement officer for them to respond to this may take up to 48 hours for them to answer. Alternatively they may make the answers available as part of an addendum added to the tendering portal page.

3. Note the contact details and tender deadlines

Go through the Invitation to Offer Details noting:

  • Closing date and time
  • Contact person
  • Offer validity period
  • How to lodge the offer
  • Proposed timeframe, taking particular note of the period between “commencement date” and “delivery date” – this is the delivery period

4. Note the contract conditions

Go through the Conditions of Offer and the Conditions of Contract:

  • Download the standard conditions of offer and contract and read them
  • Note anything you don’t agree to work toward and prepare an alternative response
  • Note any additional conditions of offer and contract

5. Consider the evaluation criteria and how weightings

Go through Offer Evaluation Process and Criteria and note the evaluation criteria and any associated weightings.
 
If weightings are provided, use these as a guide to direct your efforts to those criteria of greater importance to the agency. Don’t forget, however, that you are scored on all criteria, and you may do yourself a disservice if you gloss too lightly over more lowly weighted criteria.
 
Make sure you address each criterion clearly. Use examples which are relevant, and ensure that your response is to the point and does not include any padding or irrelevant information.
 
When addressing the criteria, keep in mind the operational requirements of the procurement. Your time is best spent ensuring that you address the requirements as closely as possible; going beyond the operational requirements specified in the criteria and the broader offer wastes both your time and money.

6. Get in touch with the procurement officer

Follow up the procurement officer for answers to your questions/clarifications if they have not come back to you within 48 hours. 
 

7. Complete Response Forms

Complete all of the forms in Response Forms noting the correct ways to respond. If any forms are not applicable make sure you use the term “This does not apply to this offer because....” – give them a reasonable explanation behind this so they have something to evaluate.

8. Proofread thoroughly against criteria

Go back through the response forms and check against the evaluation criteria. Have you provided the best response you possibly can to each evaluation criteria? If yes, submit your response. If no, include any additional information that will maximise your response against the evaluation criteria. 

So now that you know the critical elements of a tender document, it's time to respond to the evaluation criteria by demonstrating what you can do to win the business. The request document should also describe the evaluation methodology including, for example, whether the tender will be assessed under the least cost, numerical scoring or matrix selection method. If you're not sure of what these terms mean, or would simply like to learn more about how government officers are taught to evaluate offers, download our free eBook: Offer Evaluation Methods, which details the three main evaluation guidelines used to award work.