Most companies that participate in public procurement have a limited bid team and a limited budget. Bidding on everything is not a strategy — it is a recipe for poor tenders and burn-out. A structured bid/no-bid decision determines where you invest your energy and where you consciously pass. The companies that win the most are not those that bid the most — they are those that select the smartest.
Why bid/no-bid?
Every tender costs time, money and attention. A tender for a mid-sized public contract easily requires 40 to 200 hours of work — from analysing the specifications to the final review. If you invest that effort in a contract where you have little chance of winning, it comes at the expense of contracts where you could actually score.
A deliberate bid/no-bid discipline:
- Increases your win rate by only bidding on promising contracts.
- Prevents overload of the bid team.
- Improves the quality of every tender you do submit.
- Gives management clear visibility on the pipeline.
The bid/no-bid framework
Step 1: Initial screening (go/no-go)
Within 24 hours of discovering a contract, you carry out an initial screening. These are knock-out criteria — if the answer is “no” to any of these questions, you stop here.
- Does the contract match our core activity? Bidding on something outside your expertise rarely leads to success.
- Do we meet the selection requirements? Check turnover, references, certifications, contractor registration. If you do not qualify, it is pointless.
- Can we execute it? Do you have the capacity (people, resources, planning) to deliver the contract if you win?
- Is the timing feasible? Do you have sufficient time to submit a quality tender?
Step 2: Strategic assessment (scoring matrix)
If the initial screening is positive, a deeper analysis follows. Score each factor on a scale of 1-5:
Win probability (weight: 30%)
- Do we know the contracting authority and its needs?
- Have we successfully worked with this authority before?
- How strong is our position relative to known competitors?
- Do we have unique strengths (technology, team, references)?
Strategic value (weight: 25%)
- Does this contract fit our long-term strategy?
- Does it open doors to a new market or client?
- Does it strengthen our reference portfolio?
Financial attractiveness (weight: 25%)
- Is the expected margin acceptable?
- What about payment terms and cash flow risk?
- Are there hidden costs (surety bond, insurance, travel costs)?
Feasibility (weight: 20%)
- Do we have the right people available?
- Is the planning realistic?
- What execution risks exist?
Decision rule: A weighted total score above 3.5 is a “bid”. Between 2.5 and 3.5 is a “conditional bid” (extra attention needed). Below 2.5 is a “no-bid”.
Step 3: Formal decision and communication
The bid/no-bid decision is recorded and communicated to the team. In the case of a “bid”, tender planning starts immediately. In the case of a “no-bid”, the reason is documented — this is valuable information for future decisions.
The red flags
Certain signals strongly argue for a no-bid:
- The specifications appear to be tailor-made for a specific competitor. The technical specifications refer to brand names, the selection requirements exactly match the profile of one company.
- The deadline is unrealistically short and the publication appears to have been deliberately delayed.
- The contract is a re-tender of a previous contract where the incumbent has a significant advantage.
- The price is fixed and you can only distinguish yourself on quality where you have no clear advantage.
- You have no relationship whatsoever with the contracting authority and it is a procedure without negotiation.
The green flags
Signals that argue in favour of a bid:
- You have been invited by the contracting authority or have already had contact through a market consultation.
- You have strong references that exactly match the required experience.
- The award criteria emphasise quality and innovation — precisely where your added value lies.
- You know the team you can deploy and they have proven expertise.
- The contract fits in your strategic pipeline and strengthens your market position.
Documentation and learning
Keep a register of all bid/no-bid decisions and their outcome. After the award — whether you won or lost — you evaluate:
- Was the decision to bid correct?
- Was the estimate of win probability realistic?
- Which factors did we over- or underestimate?
This feedback loop makes your bid/no-bid framework increasingly sharp.
Sources
- Shipley Associates — Capture & Proposal Management
- APMP (Association of Proposal Management Professionals) — Bid/No-Bid Framework