As a supplier of technical services to a government agency in the 80’s we were always faced with a multiple set of buyers on each procurement. Each buyer within the agencies selection committee had a different need priority. Yes, we had to assess each buyer’s influence on the decision process and address their individual need priority.
In a given procurement we may score best technically and see the contract awarded to the low cost bidder or we may be the low cost bidder and see the contract awarded to the best technical team. Some contracts we successfully bid in the past were preferentially set aside for non-profit or minority owned businesses.
The successful bidder satisfied all team members’ minimum requirements and overwhelmed the team decision maker in meeting their needs. The trick was to know each team members need priority and where the power lay in the decision making team. Consistent winners in government services contracting like SAIC, ManTech, and Lockheed Martin know the customers team, their individual needs and who will dominate the decision process.
When selling to any large organization, do you know all the buyers and their need priority? Do you know which buyer will most influence the decision process?
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Competitive Position/]
» Posted
by:
brobinson
on Mon Nov 07 08:50:16 MST 2005 -
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