Tuesday, 16 March 2010

Bidding hysteria: 5 things that make you tear your hair out.



As part of my complete devotion to using social media as a route to unlimited professional prosperity (read: I'm trying justify my addiction by using it as a work tool rather than as simply a sophisticated time-wasting device), I've started taking part in a few of the discussions raised by various sales and marketing groups on LinkedIn.

The discussion that caught my eye today was entitled: What are the most common problems bid managers face? Here is my response with the top 5 things that came to mind when I saw this question...

Bids, pitches, tenders, proposals, beauty parades ... whatever you call them they can be stressful; causing you to tear your hair out at times. As a business development manager in the professional services industry, they were always the aspect of the job that kept me late in the office and most frequently dialling for a pizza to get me through the dark office hours. But bid writing also keeps your professional adrenalin pumping. They can be immensely rewarding projects to work on and once you understand the challenges it gets easier to anticipate problems and manage them. I would list my top 5 common problems as:

1. Engaging a bid team. Bid management can be lonely (and demoralising) if you try to take it all on yourself. Assembling a team, getting them excited about the potential of the work on offer and securing their commitment and contribution is an important factor in success. It also makes bids far more enjoyable to work on.

2. Keeping the momentum going. As the bid manager you are often the one who makes sure the key milestones are hit that will ensure delivery of the bid, on time and in a winning format. Keeping people interested and involved means you need to radiate energy and enthusiasm (which after a long day/evening editing technical text into readable copy can be a bit of a struggle).

3. Panic! As the deadline gets closer, people panic, the blood pressures of the interested partners rise furiously as they realise they haven't done as much as they should. And as bid manager you need to keep calm and positive and resist the urge to join the hysteria.

4. Making sense of contributed text. Sometimes it can be a few disjointed bullets and sometimes reams of complicated copy presented in the form of long sentences and jargon. Against the clock you can find yourself under pressure to convert this into sparkling, persuasive sales copy that won't send the reader into a deep, peaceful sleep.

5. Managing your time. Pulled in all directions and expected to perform miracles, a good bid manager needs to know what and when to delegate e.g. can a secretary help with the minor tweaks and amends while you focus on creating original content, can an enthusiastic junior fee earner help chase contributions etc?


And looking back over these now, I realise it is overcoming these challenges and managing them with a smile that makes a good bid manager. And also what makes their skills so in demand. Bid managers out there - Afternoon Debate salutes you!

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