RFPs are open to all bidders, some companies whittle down the competition by requiring prospective bidders to fill out a pre-qualification form. These forms are usually questionnaires – some actually call them PQQs, or Pre-Qualification Questionnaires – but they come in a variety of sizes, formats, and structures, and you can count on them requiring the following:
❯❯ Information about your company, including its size, location of offices, scope of resources, type of company, and how long you’ve been in business
❯❯ References and evidence of how well you’ve performed on similar jobs in the past
❯❯ Human resources data, such as minority ownership and sustainability programs
Following instructions: Compliance and the case for responsiveness
To win with your RFP response, you must comply with your customer’s requirements. If you fudge, hedge, or dodge, you lose. It’s that simple.
A compliant proposal is one that clearly and directly
❯❯ Meets the customer’s detailed requirements
❯❯ Follows all the customer’s submittal instructions
❯❯ Answers the customer’s questions
To maximize your chances, you need to
❯❯ Respond to and meet every requirement your customer identifies
❯❯ Structure your proposal exactly as your customer instructs
❯❯ Adhere to all the formatting and packaging guidelines that your customer specifies
❯❯ Stay within the page limit your customer sets
❯❯ Build a compliance matrix to show your customer where in your proposal you respond to a requirement (see Chapter 4 for how)
And then there’s responsiveness. Being responsive does compliance one better. Responsive proposals address overarching goals, underlying concerns, and key issues and values that your customer may not spell out in its RFP.
❯❯ Understanding and addressing your customer’s stated and implied needs
❯❯ Describing the benefits your customer will gain from your solution
❯❯ Pricing your proposal within your customer’s budget
❯❯ Editing your response so it reads like your customer talks
Facing the third degree: The challenge of Q&A-style RFPs
Most RFPs consist of a series of questions that you must answer thoroughly while wrapping a story line or set of messages around the answers. A question-and-answer (Q&A) style of RFP provides specific directions on how to structure your response: You follow the organization of the RFP to the letter and answer each question one by one as it appears in the text. Deviating from this approach can cost you business.
Q&A-style RFPs often have short deadlines and are notoriously demanding. Procurement organizations and consultants use Q&A-style RFPs to develop line-by-line assessments for comparing each bidder’s capabilities and solutions. Q&A-style RFPs not only ask many direct, compliance-oriented questions but also ask challenging, open-ended questions that you really can’t answer satisfactorily without a consistent win strategy. A win strategy is the collection of tactics you use to help you win a specific opportunity – written and dispersed to everyone on the proposal team. Clearly defining your win strategy and its components ensures that your contributors consistently echo your main messages throughout your proposal.
To devise a consistent win strategy, you must understand the entire scope of the opportunity (which is why you read the RFP cover to cover) and be able to answer every question with an eye to how it relates to all your other answers. A win strategy is something you’ll create early in your process for every opportunity (see Chapter 6 for a full discussion) and includes the following:
❯❯ A succinct statement of your overall solution and benefits so all contributors think about your strategy as they write their answers.
❯❯ Expressions of your solution’s most important, overarching benefits (these are sometimes called win themes and must contain a need, a pain statement, a feature, a benefit, and a corresponding proof point). You need to echo your win themes at every opportunity within a proposal (see Chapters 6 and 7 for more on writing win themes).
❯❯ Clear descriptions of your customer’s hot buttons (those compelling reasons to buy). Including your customer’s hot buttons in your win strategy ensures that you consistently address your customer’s most pressing and emotionally charged issues. Check out the preceding section for more about hot buttons.
❯❯ A SWOT analysis of your and your competitors’ products and services (SWOT stands for strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats). A SWOT analysis will help you align your solution with your customer’s needs while evaluating how well you stack up against your competition (see Chapter 5 for more on SWOT).
❯❯ Your company’s key discriminators. These are the things that matter to the customer that you can do that your competition can’t, or things you do better than your competition.
Win strategies are easier to create and implement when you know as much as possible about your customers, their needs, and your competitors before an RFP is released. If you’ve had a meaningful dialogue with your customers before they release an RFP, you have time to gather the right people, exchange knowledge about the customer’s hot buttons and how you’ve solved similar problems,