Wait, so I have to actually talk to someone?
A co-worker of mine gained an edge on a bid a few years ago through his ingenuity.
Our company was bidding on an interstate mill and overlay job with several thousand feet of guardrail work. The DOT let the job as an “A+B" bid. For those who are unfamiliar, an A+B bid typically works as follows:
My friend called a guardrail subcontractor prior to the bid to discuss sequencing. It turned out that the guardrail subcontractor could work within the patching, milling, and paving lane closures to perform their work. This reduced the overall number of days to perform the work by 30 or $300,000 (30 days x $10,000 per day). There were 4 bidders on the job. None of the competitors thought to do this. Our firm capitalized on the strategy and won the bid. This was partially the result of a strong relationship with a trusted subcontractor that involved a personal touch to better understand their work and approach.
Bids are not complete without the best available subcontractor and material suppliers on board. On many unit price highway bids, subcontractor controlled items comprise over 70% of the bid item count. Picking up the phone to discuss upcoming bids with key vendors (pre-quote and post-quote) will improve outcomes. In today’s competitive markets, every potential edge matters. Sure, emails and/or document portals are a must for documentation. But emails alone do not suffice. A blind RFQ is just another of the tens or hundreds of emails that subcontractors receive every day. These folks are busy just like everyone else. Standing out and getting what one wants means speaking to a real person and being prepared with a list of requests, questions, and knowledge about the bid.
Below a few reasons why personal, pre-bid conversations with vendors can be a differentiator:
We welcome your thoughts (both prime contractors and subcontractors/suppliers alike) on pre-bid communication as we progress on our journey of the 8 fundamentals.
At Edgevanta, we are building a technology to help solve the project acquisition process for highway contractors.
Sincerely,
Tristan Wilson
CEO and Founder
Edgevanta, LLC
This is the 6th part of a multi-part series on the project acquisition process of the construction cycle for highway contractors.