Tender Proposal Writing: How to Structure and Win More Bids

Winning tender proposal writing means submitting a fully compliant bid that answers each evaluation criterion in the buyer’s own language, leads with clear win themes, and presents pricing transparently. Most bids are lost on compliance and clarity long before price — so structure and evidence matter as much as your offer.

If your team responds to RFPs, RFQs and government tenders, the gap between a shortlist and a rejection is rarely the quality of your work. It is whether the bid was easy to score, easy to verify, and impossible to disqualify. This guide walks your proposal writers through the practical mechanics of getting that right.

Start with the evaluation criteria, not the cover letter

The single biggest improvement most teams can make is to write the bid backwards — from the scorecard. Before drafting a word, extract every evaluation criterion, mandatory requirement and submission instruction from the tender document into a compliance matrix.

A simple compliance matrix gives every reviewer (and the evaluator) a clean trail:

Requirement Tender ref Where addressed Page Status
Valid tax compliance status Section 3.1 Annexure A 14 Complete
3 contactable references Section 5.2 Track record table 6 Complete
Methodology for delivery Section 6.4 Technical response 8-11 Complete
Pricing in prescribed format Annexure C Pricing schedule 18 Complete

This does three things: it stops you being disqualified on a missed mandatory item, it lets evaluators find your evidence instantly, and it forces you to answer the question that was actually asked rather than the one you wish had been asked.

Build win themes before you write

A win theme is a short, repeatable statement that connects what the buyer cares about to something you do measurably better. It is the difference between “we are experienced” and “our last three rollouts of this scope went live on time with zero safety incidents — here is the client reference.”

To find your win themes, ask:

  • What is the buyer’s real risk? (Delays, non-delivery, budget overrun, compliance failure, poor change management.)
  • What evidence do we have that we remove that risk? (Track record, accreditations, named team, methodology, guarantees.)
  • What can a competitor not easily claim? (Local presence, sector-specific experience, a proven on-site model.)

Then thread each win theme consistently through the executive summary, the technical response and the references. Three or four strong, evidenced themes beat a dozen vague claims.

Structure a compliant bid

Follow the tender’s prescribed structure exactly — section numbering, annexure labels, file naming. If no structure is prescribed, a reliable default is:

  1. Cover letter / declaration — signed, dated, confirming you meet mandatory requirements.
  2. Executive summary — the buyer’s problem in their words, your solution, your win themes, and the headline outcome. Written last; read first.
  3. Compliance / returnable schedules — every mandatory document, in the order requested.
  4. Technical response — methodology, delivery plan, timelines, team, risk management, mapped point-by-point to the scope.
  5. Track record — relevant, recent, contactable references with measurable results.
  6. Pricing schedule — in the prescribed format, with assumptions stated.
  7. Annexures — certificates, CVs, policies, registrations.

Write to the evaluator, not to yourself. Use the tender’s own headings, mirror its terminology, and answer in the same order the questions are asked. Make each response self-contained so a reviewer scoring one section never has to hunt elsewhere.

Respond to evaluation criteria the way they are scored

Evaluators allocate marks against defined functionality or quality criteria, then assess returnable compliance, and finally apply the price and preference scoring set out in the tender. For your technical response:

  • Quote the criterion, then answer it directly under a matching heading.
  • State the claim, then prove it. Every assertion needs evidence — a metric, a named project, a certificate reference.
  • Mirror the weighting. If methodology carries the most marks, give it the most depth. Don’t lavish detail on a 5-mark item and skim a 40-mark one.
  • Make scoring effortless. Bullet the key points, use the evaluator’s language, and put the answer first and the background second.

On preference points and compliance, the South African framework is changing, so treat all of the following as general guidance, not legal advice. Under the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act regulations (PPPFA 2022, in force 16 January 2023), preference points are awarded against “specific goals” — for example historically-disadvantaged (HDI) ownership by race, gender or disability, and RDP-aligned objectives — rather than the generic B-BBEE level, on an 80/20 split for tenders between roughly R30,000 and R50 million and a 90/10 split above R50 million, with functionality or quality thresholds set per tender by each organ of state. The Public Procurement Act 28 of 2024 repeals the PPPFA and introduces set-asides (bids reserved for Black-, Black-women-, women- and persons-with-disability-owned and small enterprises), phasing in through 2025/26. Always confirm the exact scoring, thresholds and required goals for your specific bid against the published tender document and the relevant organ of state. For a fuller treatment, see our guides below on government tenders and on procurement compliance.

Present pricing so it cannot be misread

Price is where compliant bids are still lost — usually through arithmetic errors, a wrong format, or hidden assumptions. Get this right:

  • Use the prescribed pricing schedule exactly. Don’t reformat it.
  • State all assumptions and exclusions clearly, so the buyer isn’t guessing.
  • Check the maths twice, and reconcile the schedule total against any summary figure.
  • Be transparent about VAT, escalation and validity period where the tender allows.
  • Tie price to value in the technical narrative — never leave price standing alone with no justification.

A clean, defensible price that matches the prescribed format protects an otherwise strong bid from a technical disqualification.

Common proposal mistakes that lose winnable bids

Mistake Why it costs you Fix
Generic, recycled content Evaluators see it instantly; scores nothing Answer this tender’s criteria in its language
Missing a mandatory document Disqualification before scoring Compliance matrix, checked twice
Ignoring the prescribed format Marks lost or bid set aside Mirror structure, numbering, file names
Claims with no proof Unscored or low-scored State claim, then evidence
Pricing errors or wrong format Disqualification or distrust Use the schedule; check the maths
Submitting late or wrong channel Automatic exclusion Build a submission checklist and timeline

Need a winning bid template? Download our free Corporate Training Provider Comparison Checklist + sample RFP to see how a well-structured request and response are laid out — a useful model for your own bid library. Request it here.

Build the skill in-house with BOTI

Most teams can lift their win rate quickly once writers learn to bid from the scorecard, build evidenced win themes and present pricing cleanly. BOTI runs a practical, facilitator-led bid and proposal writing skills programme for South African teams — delivered in-house at your offices in Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban or Pretoria, or remotely — built around your real tenders so writers practise on live or recent bids. Delegates receive a BOTI certificate of completion (this is not an accredited qualification). Need accredited training? Ask about BOTI’s QCTO/SETA-accredited Project Management and Management programmes for teams that manage the full bid-to-delivery cycle.

It fits naturally alongside our broader supply chain and procurement training, and pairs well with tender and contract management training for teams that manage the full bid-to-delivery cycle. If you respond to public-sector work, read how to respond to a government tender in SA for the compliance side, and our guide to procurement and SCM compliance (PFMA/PPPFA) for the regulatory framework.

Book a 15-minute callback or request a quote for in-house bid and proposal writing training, scoped to your sector and your live tenders. Request a quote or book a callback.

Frequently asked questions

What is tender proposal writing?

Tender proposal writing is the discipline of preparing a structured, compliant response to a buyer’s tender, RFP or RFQ. It covers reading the evaluation criteria, building a compliance matrix, writing an evidenced technical response, presenting pricing in the prescribed format, and submitting on time and through the correct channel — all designed to score the maximum marks available.

How do you write a winning tender?

Write backwards from the scorecard. Extract every requirement into a compliance matrix, build three or four evidenced win themes around the buyer’s real risks, follow the prescribed structure exactly, answer each criterion in the evaluator’s own language with proof for every claim, and present a clean, format-compliant price. The bids that win are the ones that are easiest to score and impossible to disqualify.

Do we need a bid writing course if we already win some tenders?

Often yes. Teams that win occasionally are usually leaving marks (and bids) on the table through inconsistent structure, weak evidence or pricing slips. Proposal writing training standardises a repeatable, scorecard-driven method across your team, so quality doesn’t depend on which person happens to draft the bid.

Can the training use our own tenders?

Yes. BOTI’s bid and proposal writing training is run around your real, live or recent tenders so writers practise on the documents they actually submit, and leave with reusable templates, a compliance-matrix approach and a bid library tailored to your sector.

Is the preference-point and B-BBEE guidance in a tender fixed?

No — scoring rules are set per tender and the South African procurement framework is changing, with the Public Procurement Act 28 of 2024 phasing in set-asides to replace the PPPFA 2022 regime. Treat any preference-point or B-BBEE guidance as general information, not legal advice, and always confirm the exact thresholds, goals and scoring against the published tender document and the relevant organ of state.


BOTI (Business Optimization Training Institute) is an accredited South African corporate training provider offering 450+ programmes in-house and remotely. Request a quote or book a callback.

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