Connect, learn and strategize at Responsive Summit 2023. Also, check out the blog about our rebrand.

THE RFPIO BLOG

Start Responding Like a Pro

The RFPIO blog is full of insights and best practices, giving you the tools you’ll need to streamline your process and respond with confidence.

21 best RFP response tools for 2023

21 best RFP response tools for 2023

Ready to win more RFPs? Start with these 21 RFP response tools rated by our team and customers who use them to improve efficiency & win rates.


Category: Tag: RFP tools

21 best RFP response tools for 2023

21 best RFP response tools for 2023

If you find yourself with an abundance of requests for proposals (RFPs) and a shortage of time, you’re not alone. As you might expect, here at Responsive, we talk to a lot of proposal professionals about RFP response tools. Through hundreds of conversations, we’ve heard the good, the bad and the ugly. Luckily, there are a ton of great RFP response tools for almost every challenge.

Recently, our team got together to talk about the RFP tools we use ourselves as well as the tools our customers have told us they love. I’ve rounded up the best of the best here. Whether you’re a proposal team of one or one of many, there are tools that can make your RFP response process even better. 

21 top RFP response tools to simplify your proposal process

RFP project management tools

RFPs have a lot of moving parts. Pair that with a tight timeline and you may find yourself in a tough spot. Organizing all of the necessary people and tasks to meet your deadline can be a challenge. So, you need a good project management system to guide your process. These project management systems bring clarity to your process and help to keep everyone engaged and on track. 

1. RACI matrix

Category: Project management strategy

Why we like it: A RACI matrix gets everyone on the same page. This table-based system organizes the roles and responsibilities of everyone involved in your RFP process, from subject matter experts (SMEs) to approvers. When used as an RFP tool, it clearly defines how each person will contribute to the proposal. It maps out who is responsible, accountable, consulted and informed for each task of a project.

2. ProofHub

Category: Project management tool

Why we like it: Having a suite of powerful planning and organizational tools in a single software is a huge benefit to proposal managers and their teams. ProofHub is a collaboration and project management software that works well for teams of every size across various industries.

From online proofing, task management, file management, and scheduling calendars to Gantt charts, Kanban boards, and time tracking, ProofHub empowers proposal teams to easily plan, collaborate, organize and deliver on-time RFP responses while ensuring team accountability. This easy-to-use, cloud-based SaaS tool has a minimal learning curve, which makes it easy to onboard new members, SMEs and proposal contributors.

Proposal content tools

Every good proposal tells a story. The content in each of your proposals should be engaging, cohesive and compelling. It should clearly and professionally express why your business is exactly the solution the buyer is looking for. When it comes to accomplishing this, there are two main challenges for proposal managers.

First, bringing together answers written by a dozen or more authors can cause your proposal to feel disjointed and inconsistent. Everyone has a different communication style and tone of voice, but the proposal needs to feel on-brand and in line with your organization’s previous interactions with the customer.

The second challenge that comes up when creating proposal content is proofreading. As language becomes more informal, spending time perfecting grammar and style may seem unnecessary. However, we all know someone who delights in finding spelling and punctuation errors – imagine that’s the person who will decide if your proposal makes the cut. Even for those who are less critical, errors can send the wrong message. Unfortunately, they can make your business seem unprofessional, uninvested and ambivalent about winning the bid.

8. Grammarly

Category: Web-based proofreading app and extension

Why we like it: One of the most popular and effortless online editing solutions, Grammarly can be used as a web app or a Chrome extension. Members of our sales team use the program to spot and correct errors in spelling, punctuation and grammar. This RFP response tool is free to use and offers paid enhancements if you want even more customized assistance.

A word to the wise, while the program does its best to make helpful suggestions, it doesn’t always understand the nuance of context and language. As with anything, it’s a tool to make finding simple mistakes easier, but there’s no substitute for a final review with human eyes.

9. Readable

Category: Readability and tone app

Why we like it: While Grammarly checks for proofreading errors, Readable evaluates for tone and sentiment. Our marketing team uses the app to review almost all of our blog content and online resources. It gauges how formal or informal your writing is in addition to how difficult it is to read.

In addition, it makes suggestions to help you avoid sentences that are too long, clichés, unnecessary adverbs, passive voice and overly complex words. Proposal responses that are approachable and easy to read are more likely to be understood and remembered. This RFP response tool offers a free online version as well as an affordable paid downloadable app.

10. Visible Thread

Category: Customizable style and tone-checking app

Why we like it: Visible Thread is like a member of your marketing team that helps apply the company’s established style and verbiage to proposal responses. You can use this tool for RFPs to help ensure that capitalization, tone and word choice are consistent no matter who in the company wrote the response.

For example, if your business refers to buyers of your product as customers rather than clients, the system will recognize any incorrect usage of the word clients. Visible Thread also offers helpful reports that can show who has adopted the tool and measure improvements in writing.

11. Board Studios

Category: Explainer video creation

Why we like it: Sometimes conveying complex ideas is easier in person. While you can’t meet with RFP decision-makers, you can include video content in your proposal to help explain your business.

Board Studios works with you to create video content that is eye-catching and compelling. Best of all, they focus on efficiency and pass the savings along to you, so their video services are more accessible than you might think. Video content can not only help your prospect develop a deeper understanding, but it can also make your company more memorable and relatable.

Proposal design tools

Just like the quality of your content, the way your proposal looks makes a statement. It’s like a first impression and can have a huge impact on how the person evaluating the proposal feels about your business. Your proposal should make the reader feel confident in your ability to deliver results. 

Create a proposal that is visually engaging and conveys the care and attention the client can expect from your business. Use a great layout and good visual elements to send the right message.

12. Canva

Category: Layout builder and publication template app

Why we like it: Canva can help you create a modern, appealing proposal in no time. The software has dozens of proposal templates with lots of great page design options. Canva is easy to use and provides tools for customizing templates to meet your needs.

Upload your brand photos, your potential customer’s logo, team photos and product images to quickly create a one-of-a-kind RFP response. Canva offers both free and premium packages to meet your needs.

13. Qwilr

Category: Proposal presentation software

Why we like it: Qwilr is great for creating engaging proposals. Within the templatized system, you can customize your proposal with branded colors, fonts and formats for easy, consistent design.

Qwilr also has an option for interactive pricing, making your proposals dynamic. The resulting presentations are stunning. However, the program will work best for informal or proactive proposals that allow room for some creativity. For extensive proposals with specific formatting guidelines and submission restrictions, Qwilr might not be the best fit. 

14. ChartBlocks

Category: Chart and graph making app

Why we like it: Some concepts can be best conveyed with a chart or graphic. A well-placed graphic can help bring clarity to your RFP responses. ChartBlocks is a great tool for proposals when you need a customized chart or graphic. The program uses chart wizard to guide you through creation, selecting from dozens of charts. Import data from spreadsheets and then use the toolbar to update as needed.

Last-minute hard-copy proposal delivery

Much as we may try, some proposals can’t be completed until the very last minute. When the business requires a printed, physical copy of the proposal, prompt delivery can be the difference between winning and not being considered. In the past, that has meant a stressful rush to UPS or FedEx, but not anymore.

15. Mimeo

Category: Proposal printing and delivery

Why we like it: Delivering physical proposals on time is Mimeo’s bread and butter, so they understand your sense of urgency. They make printing and delivering a physical copy of a proposal as easy as digital delivery – it’s done with the click of a button. Simple and easy, just what you need after a last-minute proposal scramble.

Professional development tools for proposal managers

Proposal management requires a diverse set of skills, which is why education is one of the best proposal tools. In the busy world of responding to RFPs, opportunities to spend time on personal and professional development can be few and far between. However, focusing on learning more about proposal management best practices can yield huge improvements in efficiency and effectiveness. So whenever you can make time, check out these resources.

16. LinkedIn Learning

Category: Business skill development catalog

Why we like it: There’s so much educational content online that it can be difficult to sift through. LinkedIn Learning makes it easy. They provide an enormous searchable catalog of RFP response-related skills. You can brush up on grammar basics, discover new sales tactics, explore project management best practices or learn more about proposal writing.

The courses are broken up into easily digestible sessions, so you can spend a little time each day improving your skillset. Each course is led by an expert, so you’re learning from the best. Because of the wide range of topics applicable to hundreds of professional roles, many companies provide free access to LinkedIn Learning.

17. APMP certifications

Category: Certifications for proposal professionals

Why we like it: If you’re ready to take your RFP knowledge to the next level, explore the Association of Proposal Management Professionals (APMP) certifications. APMP offers a certification program with three levels – foundation, practitioner and professional. The program is designed to develop deep industry knowledge and explore best practices for proposal management excellence.

18. The bid toolkit

Category: Proposal development training and consulting

Why we like it: Built by a collection experts in proposals, sales pitches, marketing and more, the bid toolkit offers an easy-to-follow guide for creating an effective and repeatable proposal process. In fact, The bid toolkit website is full of free helpful reference materials as well as paid modules, tools and videos. Named APMP’s 2020 Vendor of the Year, this is a great place to explore the proposal process.

Proposal manager peer networks

Self-service tools for independent development are great, but there’s nothing like connecting with your peers. There’s no one that will understand the challenges and thrills of creating a killer proposal the way that other proposal managers do. Connecting with peers to share challenges, find creative solutions and share new trends and tips can improve the practice for everyone.

19. APMP’s Bid and Proposal Con

Category: Annual proposal professionals conference

Why we like it: This conference, hosted by APMP, is the largest gathering of professionals involved in the proposal process in the world. You’ll find proposal writers, bid managers, business development professionals, project managers and marketing professionals at this conference. There’s a wide range of industries, government and business sectors represented, and each has something unique to contribute. 

20. APMP regional chapters

Category: Local meetups and networking

Why we like it: In addition to the annual conference, APMP boasts 28 local chapters around the world. Each chapter has an active social media presence and many chapters also host regular in-person meetups.

21. LinkedIn groups

Category: Proposal professional group forums

Why we like it: In between conferences and meetups, you can still stay connected with your peers on LinkedIn. There are several great LinkedIn groups for anyone involved in the RFP process. Each is a little different and offers insights, advice and networking for all levels of proposal manager. The members of these groups often post valuable content full of interesting tips, advice and trends.

The advantage of RFP response tools

In the last few years, we’ve been seeing the number of RFPs steadily increasing across most industries. As we prepare for next year, we expect this trend will continue. So, now is the time to take advantage of the best

RFP solutions and tools available. After all, even small improvements to the proposal process can make a big impact on revenue.

Did we miss something? Let us know what your favorite RFP response tools are on LinkedIn or Twitter.

Proposal collaboration tools

Anyone that has managed a proposal from start to finish knows that collaboration is crucial. In fact, a survey by Fierce indicated that 86 percent of employees blame workplace failures on poor collaboration. Admittedly, effective collaboration can be a challenge. Getting timely input from stakeholders, SMEs, business operations and content reviewers is a balancing act.

As the proposal manager, you need to convey urgency, but as a colleague, you understand that SMEs have their own workloads outside of contributing to proposals. Meanwhile, input from SMEs is necessary to create a successful, complete proposal. To make collaboration easier, consider these RFP response tools.

3. Google Docs

Category: Web-based collaborative word processor

Why we like it: The biggest benefit of working in Google Docs can be boiled down to one thing — real-time editing. Traditional word processors require document versions to be sent back and forth, making accurate tracking almost impossible. Whereas Google Docs allows multiple editors to work on the same document at the same time. Comments, task assignments, change tracking, auto-save and permissions features are also available. 

This free RFP tool is easy to use and has most of the same functionality and user experience as Microsoft Word. The only catch? Storage. Google offers 15GB of free storage per user for all of their Google account tools. This includes frequently used tools like Gmail messages, Google Drive and Google photos. So, it may not be ideal for those who use much of the Google Suite. Likewise, it may not be a fit for teams who collaborate on dozens of multi-page proposals with large visual attachments.

4. Boomerang

Category: Gmail automated follow-up extension

Why we like it: If you’re managing your proposals without a centralized knowledge library, you’re probably communicating through email. The web of messages between colleagues, subject matter experts and stakeholders can quickly become overwhelming. In that tangled web, it’s easy to miss an email or two, which is a scary thought. However, Boomerang can help. It’s a free RFP tool that can save you a ton of stress and reduce the risk of losing track of a response.

Boomerang is easy to download and add to your current Gmail account. It’s available for both desktop and mobile apps. The free version allows you to schedule 10 email sends per month. You can also monitor clicks and automate follow-up emails if you don’t hear back from an SME. In addition, Boomerang offers paid plans to further customize your experience with content analysis, notes and integrations.

Time tracking tool for RFP responses

While time tracking software may not be an obvious part of a proposal manager’s set of RFP response tools, it’s a great addition. Here’s why – tracking time can save money. For instance, it can help you identify which parts of your process are most time-consuming and should be optimized. It can also give you an idea of how much it costs your team to respond to an RFP, informing your go/no-go decisions.

Tracking time is required to calculate return on investment (ROI) for any efficiency-improving software (like most of the tools on this list). Even more, quantifying time and value gained is a great way to validate and justify budget spend on technology. At an individual level, using time tracking can help you find new ways to be more efficient and balance your workload.

5. TimeCamp

Category: Time tracking and management application

Why we like it: TimeCamp works well for tracking both productivity and billable hours. So, it is a nice tool for proposal managers as well as RFP consultants. The tracking data gathered by the software can be compiled into easily readable charts and dashboards. In addition, it integrates with many of the most popular project management tools.

TimeCamp can be set up to run in the background without requiring you to manually stop and start a timer for every activity. It is customizable and can recognize and account for idle time. So, you can head to the breakroom for that slice of birthday cake without wondering if you turned your time tracker off.

Knowledge management for proposal content

Once you’ve collaborated to create great proposal content, you’ll want to make sure you get as much value from it as possible. But before you can use it, you have to be able to find it. A study from McKinsey estimated that the average worker spends 20 percent of their time searching for information. With this in mind, it’s no surprise that sifting through old proposals, emails and documents is one of the most frustrating parts of proposal management

Today, there’s an easier way to capture, curate, categorize and search your past proposal content ⁠— with knowledge management.

6. Bloomfire

Category: Web-based knowledge-sharing platform

Why we like it: The question-and-answer style format of Bloomfire is what makes it a good fit as an RFP response tool. Within the platform, you can integrate with other apps or upload Word documents, PDFs, audio files and slide decks. Then the system indexes all of the words that appear. Pair the resulting data with AI-powered search, and knowledge is at your fingertips. If you can’t find an answer within the solution, you can crowdsource the information, which is helpful. However, it only works quickly if the people with the answers (your SMEs) are in the system regularly.

RFP management software

RFP software combines knowledge management, collaboration, proposal management and more into one powerful platform. Unlike some of the other tools on this list that are designed with a broad audience in mind but can be adapted to RFPs, this type of software is created specifically to be an RFP response tool for proposal managers and their teams. If you’re looking to make dramatic improvements your RFP process, RFP software is the way to go. 

7. Responsive (Formerly RFPIO)

Category: RFP response software

Why we like it: Responsive is the best-in-class and industry-leading response management platform, for good reasons. 

Responsive incorporates knowledge management, content collaboration, RFP project management, remote access, data to drive informed decisions and RFP automation in one platform.

Proposal content tools

Every good proposal tells a story. The content in each of your proposals should be engaging, cohesive and compelling. It should clearly and professionally express why your business is exactly the solution the buyer is looking for. When it comes to accomplishing this, there are two main challenges for proposal managers.

First, bringing together answers written by a dozen or more authors can cause your proposal to feel disjointed and inconsistent. Everyone has a different communication style and tone of voice, but the proposal needs to feel on-brand and in line with your organization’s previous interactions with the customer.

The second challenge that comes up when creating proposal content is proofreading. As language becomes more informal, spending time perfecting grammar and style may seem unnecessary. However, we all know someone who delights in finding spelling and punctuation errors – imagine that’s the person who will decide if your proposal makes the cut. Even for those who are less critical, errors can send the wrong message. Unfortunately, they can make your business seem unprofessional, uninvested and ambivalent about winning the bid.

8. Grammarly

Category: Web-based proofreading app and extension

Why we like it: One of the most popular and effortless online editing solutions, Grammarly can be used as a web app or a Chrome extension. Members of our sales team use the program to spot and correct errors in spelling, punctuation and grammar. This RFP response tool is free to use and offers paid enhancements if you want even more customized assistance.

A word to the wise, while the program does its best to make helpful suggestions, it doesn’t always understand the nuance of context and language. As with anything, it’s a tool to make finding simple mistakes easier, but there’s no substitute for a final review with human eyes.

9. Readable

Category: Readability and tone app

Why we like it: While Grammarly checks for proofreading errors, Readable evaluates for tone and sentiment. Our marketing team uses the app to review almost all of our blog content and online resources. It gauges how formal or informal your writing is in addition to how difficult it is to read.

In addition, it makes suggestions to help you avoid sentences that are too long, clichés, unnecessary adverbs, passive voice and overly complex words. Proposal responses that are approachable and easy to read are more likely to be understood and remembered. This RFP response tool offers a free online version as well as an affordable paid downloadable app.

10. Visible Thread

Category: Customizable style and tone-checking app

Why we like it: Visible Thread is like a member of your marketing team that helps apply the company’s established style and verbiage to proposal responses. You can use this tool for RFPs to help ensure that capitalization, tone and word choice are consistent no matter who in the company wrote the response.

For example, if your business refers to buyers of your product as customers rather than clients, the system will recognize any incorrect usage of the word clients. Visible Thread also offers helpful reports that can show who has adopted the tool and measure improvements in writing.

11. Board Studios

Category: Explainer video creation

Why we like it: Sometimes conveying complex ideas is easier in person. While you can’t meet with RFP decision-makers, you can include video content in your proposal to help explain your business.

Board Studios works with you to create video content that is eye-catching and compelling. Best of all, they focus on efficiency and pass the savings along to you, so their video services are more accessible than you might think. Video content can not only help your prospect develop a deeper understanding, but it can also make your company more memorable and relatable.

Proposal design tools

Just like the quality of your content, the way your proposal looks makes a statement. It’s like a first impression and can have a huge impact on how the person evaluating the proposal feels about your business. Your proposal should make the reader feel confident in your ability to deliver results. 

Create a proposal that is visually engaging and conveys the care and attention the client can expect from your business. Use a great layout and good visual elements to send the right message.

12. Canva

Category: Layout builder and publication template app

Why we like it: Canva can help you create a modern, appealing proposal in no time. The software has dozens of proposal templates with lots of great page design options. Canva is easy to use and provides tools for customizing templates to meet your needs.

Upload your brand photos, your potential customer’s logo, team photos and product images to quickly create a one-of-a-kind RFP response. Canva offers both free and premium packages to meet your needs.

13. Qwilr

Category: Proposal presentation software

Why we like it: Qwilr is great for creating engaging proposals. Within the templatized system, you can customize your proposal with branded colors, fonts and formats for easy, consistent design.

Qwilr also has an option for interactive pricing, making your proposals dynamic. The resulting presentations are stunning. However, the program will work best for informal or proactive proposals that allow room for some creativity. For extensive proposals with specific formatting guidelines and submission restrictions, Qwilr might not be the best fit. 

14. ChartBlocks

Category: Chart and graph making app

Why we like it: Some concepts can be best conveyed with a chart or graphic. A well-placed graphic can help bring clarity to your RFP responses. ChartBlocks is a great tool for proposals when you need a customized chart or graphic. The program uses chart wizard to guide you through creation, selecting from dozens of charts. Import data from spreadsheets and then use the toolbar to update as needed.

Last-minute hard-copy proposal delivery

Much as we may try, some proposals can’t be completed until the very last minute. When the business requires a printed, physical copy of the proposal, prompt delivery can be the difference between winning and not being considered. In the past, that has meant a stressful rush to UPS or FedEx, but not anymore.

15. Mimeo

Category: Proposal printing and delivery

Why we like it: Delivering physical proposals on time is Mimeo’s bread and butter, so they understand your sense of urgency. They make printing and delivering a physical copy of a proposal as easy as digital delivery – it’s done with the click of a button. Simple and easy, just what you need after a last-minute proposal scramble.

Professional development tools for proposal managers

Proposal management requires a diverse set of skills, which is why education is one of the best proposal tools. In the busy world of responding to RFPs, opportunities to spend time on personal and professional development can be few and far between. However, focusing on learning more about proposal management best practices can yield huge improvements in efficiency and effectiveness. So whenever you can make time, check out these resources.

16. LinkedIn Learning

Category: Business skill development catalog

Why we like it: There’s so much educational content online that it can be difficult to sift through. LinkedIn Learning makes it easy. They provide an enormous searchable catalog of RFP response-related skills. You can brush up on grammar basics, discover new sales tactics, explore project management best practices or learn more about proposal writing.

The courses are broken up into easily digestible sessions, so you can spend a little time each day improving your skillset. Each course is led by an expert, so you’re learning from the best. Because of the wide range of topics applicable to hundreds of professional roles, many companies provide free access to LinkedIn Learning.

17. APMP certifications

Category: Certifications for proposal professionals

Why we like it: If you’re ready to take your RFP knowledge to the next level, explore the Association of Proposal Management Professionals (APMP) certifications. APMP offers a certification program with three levels – foundation, practitioner and professional. The program is designed to develop deep industry knowledge and explore best practices for proposal management excellence.

18. The bid toolkit

Category: Proposal development training and consulting

Why we like it: Built by a collection experts in proposals, sales pitches, marketing and more, the bid toolkit offers an easy-to-follow guide for creating an effective and repeatable proposal process. In fact, The bid toolkit website is full of free helpful reference materials as well as paid modules, tools and videos. Named APMP’s 2020 Vendor of the Year, this is a great place to explore the proposal process.

Proposal manager peer networks

Self-service tools for independent development are great, but there’s nothing like connecting with your peers. There’s no one that will understand the challenges and thrills of creating a killer proposal the way that other proposal managers do. Connecting with peers to share challenges, find creative solutions and share new trends and tips can improve the practice for everyone.

19. APMP’s Bid and Proposal Con

Category: Annual proposal professionals conference

Why we like it: This conference, hosted by APMP, is the largest gathering of professionals involved in the proposal process in the world. You’ll find proposal writers, bid managers, business development professionals, project managers and marketing professionals at this conference. There’s a wide range of industries, government and business sectors represented, and each has something unique to contribute. 

20. APMP regional chapters

Category: Local meetups and networking

Why we like it: In addition to the annual conference, APMP boasts 28 local chapters around the world. Each chapter has an active social media presence and many chapters also host regular in-person meetups.

21. LinkedIn groups

Category: Proposal professional group forums

Why we like it: In between conferences and meetups, you can still stay connected with your peers on LinkedIn. There are several great LinkedIn groups for anyone involved in the RFP process. Each is a little different and offers insights, advice and networking for all levels of proposal manager. The members of these groups often post valuable content full of interesting tips, advice and trends.

The advantage of RFP response tools

In the last few years, we’ve been seeing the number of RFPs steadily increasing across most industries. As we prepare for next year, we expect this trend will continue. So, now is the time to take advantage of the best

RFP solutions and tools available. After all, even small improvements to the proposal process can make a big impact on revenue.

Did we miss something? Let us know what your favorite RFP response tools are on LinkedIn or Twitter.

13 top blogs for response professionals

13 top blogs for response professionals

I like to think of RFP response managers as the unsung heroes of their organizations. In a typical company, around fourty-five percent of revenue begins with an RFP, and response is becoming more and more competitive every day.

In addition to having a range of titles — proposal manager, bid manager, capture manager, or RFP manager — response managers wear a lot of hats. They’re part researcher, part writer, part salesperson, and part ringleader, although they may claim that they’re more than part ringleader. Keeping up with that evolving skill set can be exhausting!

You could go back to school, I suppose, or you can hone your skills through blogs. Every morning, I read a handful of curated blog posts to help up my game. They’re quick, convenient, and easy to come back to when interrupted, and the great ones make me feel a little bit smarter.

In this post, I will share some of my favorite blogs. Some are about RFPs and response management and others dust off and refine all those other hats you wear.

  1. Gartner
  2. McKinsey
  3. Learning Hub from G2
  4. Insight Partners Blog
  5. Hubspot
  6. Seth’s Blog
  7. Martech Blog
  8. Proposal Pro
  9. Presentation Zen
  10. RFPIO
  11. Winning the Business from APMP
  12. Grammarly
  13. Business Writing

Best blogs for general business trends

1. Gartner

Gartner is a fantastic resource for all things tech. They offer business consulting and some of the most thorough statistical research out there. The blog contextualizes their research and offers invaluable actionable insights to increase revenue and navigate a dynamic business environment.

Post you should start with: Is now the time to stand up or invest in sales enablement?

Generating revenue is the single most important business goal. As a writer, I like to feel as though I am part of the revenue generation process, although not directly. My colleagues in the marketing department and I are responsible for creating brand awareness and helping our sales department sell. Does that make marketing “sales enablement?” Is RFPIO a sales enablement platform? Doug Bushée with Gartner thinks so.

“(Sales enablement is) an opportunity to help your sales force be more effective, not just through technology or training but with a complete package that includes content, technology, communications, sales process, and training to enable your sales teams to drive revenue.” – Doug Bushée

 

2. McKinsey & Company

McKinsey & Company is an OG in the management consulting world. While their blog isn’t specifically geared toward RFP response, they offer insights and best practices for all verticals and organizational structures. Many in the response industry look to McKinsey for inspiration or statistics for their own blogs. McKinsey’s blog covers a wide range of topics including mergers and acquisitions, analytics, risk management, sales operations, and more.

Post you should start with: Better forecasting for large capital projects

You’d be hard-pressed to find an industry with more variables, at least when it comes to proposals, than construction. The larger the project, the more difficult the bidding process. Most (we hope) companies don’t want to underbid, but all too often, it happens. This blog post explores the psychological factors behind underbidding.

“Why do project planners, on average, fail to forecast their effect on the costs of complex projects? We’ve covered this territory before but continue to see companies making strategic decisions based on inaccurate data. Deliberately or not, costs are systematically underestimated and benefits are overestimated during project preparation—because of delusions or honest mistakes on one hand and deceptions or strategic manipulation of information or processes on the other.” – McKinsey & Company

3. Learning Hub from G2

I am sort of obsessed with reviews. I refuse to try a new hair stylist, dog groomer, or restaurant without first checking their online reviews. I’m that annoying person who scans QR codes in the aisles of Costco or Target to make sure I’m making the best buying decisions.

Before accepting my job with RFPIO, I made sure it was a cultural fit for me and I checked G2 to see what their customers had to say about the platform. G2 is more than a software review site. Its blog is a phenomenal source of information for nearly every vertical and every skill set.

Post you should start with: What is accountability in the workplace? 12 ways to foster it

Most RFP responses require several stakeholders, which is where that unofficial role of ringmaster comes in. Guest blogger Susmita Sarma has several very helpful tips to create accountability in the workplace, which is sure to help you spend less time chasing stakeholders down and more time doing the rest of your jobs.

“In reality, accountability at work is all of the above, which runs like a machine. But if the employees keep no accountability mechanism in place, things quickly fall apart. To avoid this, every employee should be accountable for their own actions at work. It builds confidence within teams and organizations because people know they can depend on one another.” – Susmita Sarma

4. Insight Partners Blog

Do you follow economic or industry news? If not, I completely get it. Sometimes our plates are so full that it’s difficult to see the world outside. Few know more about business trends than venture capitalists, which is why my go-to blog for all things business is Insight Partners.

Post you should start with: SaaS pricing tactics for a high-inflation environment

Pricing is one of the key components of an RFP, and the ultimate component of an RFQ (request for quote). Should you offer the same pricing structure today as a quarter ago? Should you raise prices to cover inflation or lower them to gain a competitive advantage?

“Properly setting prices is an untapped opportunity for SaaS providers to squeeze more value out of what they offer. We often see companies who haven’t touched their pricing for three years or more — which might explain the lack of inflationary growth in the sector. Usually this means companies have built up a significant amount of pricing power through market growth and product improvement which they haven’t yet monetized. While this was also the case well before the current inflationary environment, now the opportunities are even greater — while the risks of not adapting your pricing are more severe.” – James Wood

Best marketing blogs

5. Hubspot Blog

Hubspot is one of the top CRM platforms and it has a strong focus on marketing. Their blog could have gone under the “general trends” category, but I read Hubspot for their marketing tips. In their blog, industry experts discuss everything from a product’s life cycle to how to be more productive.

Post you should start with: 12 free personality tests you can take online today

Aren’t online personality tests so early 2000s? In most cases, I’d agree, but there is value in learning how you tick. By understanding your personality and triggers, you can help establish a more harmonious and productive work environment. And because more data is almost always better, have your teammates take the tests.

These tests are great conversation starters, especially among groups of people who don’t know each other very well. They can help create connections and establish common ground at work. Learning about your colleagues’ personality traits can reveal how each team member prefers to receive feedback and criticism. This can help your team avoid unnecessary miscommunication down the road, as well as lead to more productive projects and meetings.” – Caroline Forsey

6. Seth’s Blog

I guess you could call Seth Godin a marketing guru. He’s a Stanford Business grad, a published author, and a dot com alumnus. Now he blogs. Some of his posts read like streams of consciousness and others like social media posts. I call them bursts of marketing wisdom.

Post you should start with: Contracts and Power

Proposals aren’t technically contracts but many contain the same terms. Who has the power? Would it surprise you to know that the power shifts depending on where you are in the sales cycle? Can you control the shifts?

“In the moment before a contract is signed, the lower-powered party momentarily has more power. That’s because the other entity wants what you have. But as soon as they have it, it’s only the contract that offers concrete protection against future events.” — Seth Godin

7. Martech Blog

The content-rich Martech blog is the leading resource for tech marketers. Their team of marketing professionals blogs about diverse topics such as content strategy, World Cup marketing, and how to survive the death of cookies. They have a robust search engine, so if you have a marketing, or marketing-adjacent, question, just plug your query in to get expert tips. Check the site often as they typically post three or more blogs per day.

Post you should start with: Only 28% of B2B content marketers report having the technology they need

This post caught my attention because it’s one of the many areas where marketers and proposal professionals share common ground. Twenty-eight percent of B2B marketers have the technology they need. Proposal management is somewhat better; 43% say they have the technology they need to perform their jobs.

“The technology issues are likely the results of two things. First, too many B2B companies are letting features and functions determine what’s in their stacks, when it should be determined by their own strategy. Second, they may not understand the level of complexity and amount of resources needed to manage and maintain their martech tools.”

Best proposal blogs

8. Proposal PRO

I’ll be the first to admit that we don’t spend as much time talking about nonprofit grant proposals as we should. Even when taking profit out of the equation, as with any for-profit company, nonprofits still need to create a compelling case for organizations to untie their purse strings. Competing for an organization’s budgeted grant money is challenging. Because you have to demonstrate that your nonprofit meets a donor’s values, a captivating and clear narrative is perhaps even more important than with for-profit industries.

Jodie Eisenberg, the founder of Proposal PRO, specializes in government grants and has more than $500 million in federal grants and contracts under her belt. In her blogs, she shares the tips and tricks to win those super-competitive federal grants.

Post you should start with: 4 ways that grant-writing can ruin your personality

Confession time: one of my closest friends is a grant writer. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve heard more polite variations on #4, “Don’t talk to me—I’m on a deadline!” Proposal writers of all kinds are arguably some of the busiest in their organizations. Jodie empathizes and offers advice that might help save grant writers from themselves.

“Let’s face it, deadline pressure is a thing, and if you’re still waiting for people to sign documents, provide a final budget item, or just call you back with an OK to submit, things can get tense.” – Jodie Eisenberg

9. Presentation Zen

The first thing that caught my eye with Presentation Zen was, well, the name. I’m willing to bet that your job, like mine, is fast-paced and requires you to turn on a dime. Presentations, where perfection is expected, only add to the stress. Presentation Zen is all about bringing confidence to your presentations by featuring the best advice from presentation experts.

Post you should start with: Pixar Studios *still* offers free storytelling lessons online

You may wonder why I recommended a post about the largest animation studio in the world. I’m not suggesting you include cartoon characters and fantasy in your responses, but proposal writing, like most writing, should offer strong narratives and follow a similar arc to your favorite Pixar movies.

Pixar may be the best at the technical side of animation, but what really made them successful is their understanding of story and storytelling. In an old interview regarding Pixar’s success, Steve Jobs said this: “Even though Pixar is the most technologically advanced studio in the world, John Lasseter has a saying which has really stuck: No amount of technology will turn a bad story into a good story.”

10. RFPIO Blog

I know how it sounds to recommend our own blog, but we’re truly passionate about improving the full-circle RFP process with response management software. That means that within our blog we cover procurement in addition to proposal themes. This broad range of topics helps deepen understanding and collaboration between buyers and sellers. Not only that, but many of the posts in our blog are inspired directly by recent conversations with our customers.

Post you should start with: RFPIO CEO sees opportunity in the changing economy

This post from Ganesh Shankar, CEO at RFPIO, offers a vision of how response teams can help their companies navigate economic uncertainty. Currently, for many, RFPs are manual, time-consuming, painful, and downright annoying — but they don’t have to be. In addition to identifying challenges faced by organizations, the post explores how technology, transparency, and collaboration can drive significant revenue.

“In the grand scheme of things, this is a time when companies are looking for ways to be more efficient. Technologies tend to help companies become more efficient.
Better efficiency doesn’t mean that automation will take people’s jobs. I strongly feel that technology will allow companies to produce more and deliver better outputs with less infrastructure.” – Ganesh Shankar

11. Winning the business

APMP (the Association of Proposal Management Professionals) is the resource for proposal managers and stakeholders. Their blog, not surprisingly, is a wealth of information. Some of it is serious and some is rather tongue-in-cheek although most posts focus on best practices and industry news.

Post you should start with: Is a business proposal different from a marriage proposal?

If you google “proposal,” you’ll find that most dictionaries offer two definitions. One is a written proposal and the other involves a ring and a knee. Is it a reach to compare the two? Winning the Business makes the case that the two types of proposals have a lot more in common than we think.

“This article considers the logical progression of the capture methodology by comparing it with (the) universal experience of personal courtship. Couples go through a multi-stepped process that is remarkably like the four-step capture methodology. Both scenarios have several similarities including a common means to prompt a positive response during the proposal stage.” – Alan L. Lewis, CP APMP

Best writing blogs

12. Grammarly

What do proposal managers and college students have in common? In a word, writing. And in both cases, grammar matters. sixty-two percent of procurement departments say that they regularly receive error-riddled RFP responses. Sadly, grammatical and spelling errors can take a bidder right out of the running, which is understandable since most customers want to see attention to detail throughout an RFP response.

There are several writing and grammar tools online, but I love Grammarly because it covers many of the confusing basics like when to use accept vs. except.

Post you should start with: How to write a great business proposal

Grammarly is far more than just an online grammar checker. Its blog offers real-world advice and business writing tips. Grammarly can help boost your win rate by showcasing your company in its best light. Rachel Meltzer offers guidelines for creating a business proposal, whether solicited through an RFP or unsolicited.

“A business proposal is a document that presents one company’s products or services to another company in detail. Business proposals are often customized for the potential client. It’s a way for the company to market its product and get on the same page as its potential client before they agree to work together.” – Rachel Meltzer

13. Business Writing

While I love Grammarly, its reach is broad. There are tips and tools for students, fiction writers, and writing hobbyists. If you’re looking for something that’s specifically focused on business writing, there’s the Business Writing blog. Like Grammarly, they write entire blog posts covering confusing words like “council vs. counsel,” but their posts all have business angles.

Post you should start with: Is “data” singular or plural? Does it matter?

A tech copywriter, technical writer, and data scientist walked into a bar to ponder the word “data.” Okay, I’m open to suggestions as to a punchline, but a debate over whether “data” is singular or plural could get a little raucous, especially if one of the writers is, shall we say, traditional. Business Writing’s Ryan Fisher tackles that surprisingly controversial issue just to conclude that we’re all right.

“A look at Google’s Ngram graph shows that in American English, while the plural form (the data are) has been predominantly more common, the singular form (the data is) has been rising and is now on par with the plural form.” – Ryan Fisher

 

How to respond to an RFP like an all-star champ

How to respond to an RFP like an all-star champ

Organizations issue requests for proposals (RFPs) because they have a need that cannot be fixed internally — a big need — one that will cost lots of money. This isn’t calling a plumber to fix a clog. It’s soliciting bids from multiple contractors for complete remodels, or to construct full-on additions. So, they send out a request for proposal. Now, to win that business, you need to know how to respond to an RFP. 

Admittedly, RFPs can be challenging. So, we’re here to explore how you can master the process, create compelling bids and (hopefully) win. First, we’ll explore common obstacles you may face when you respond to an RFP. Next, we’ll offer the key steps for how to respond to an RFP as well as best practices. And finally, we’ll offer insight on how technology like RFP software makes responding a lot faster and easier. Let’s dig in.

Obstacles in the RFP response process

The scale of an RFP can be huge

RFPs contain up to thousands of questions and requests for specific content. If your company has a solution to the problem put forth by the issuer, then you respond with a proposal that includes all the answers and requested content. Depending on the size of the RFP, it can take you hours, days, or weeks to prepare a response. As long as you submit your completed RFP response by the deadline, your solution will be considered.

Competition is fierce

The issuer compares your RFP response with all of the other RFP responses received from your competitors. Sometimes, the lowest price wins. Other times, the best solution wins. Sometimes, it’s both…or neither.

Success requires more than paperwork

Much of the time, the winner results from the best pitch — an umbrella term that includes the RFP response, relationships built with sales and subject matter experts (SMEs) during the process, pricing, reputation and a variety of other factors. Then there are the times when winners are selected based on prior or existing relationships between the two organizations.

No matter what the deciding factor between an RFP win or loss, the ultimate truth is that you have to compose an RFP response to have a chance. Why not put your best foot forward?

How to respond to an RFP

1. Qualify the bid

Is this worth going after? Starting off with a bid or no-bid discussion gives you an opportunity to evaluate your win probability. Essentially, building a proposal is like investing in your future. Every investment requires close scrutiny.

2. Understand requirements

What do you need to get it done? This ranges from the type of content, to who produces it, to who is responsible for signing off on the final proposal. The list can be extensive, but it must be comprehensive to make sure nothing falls through the cracks.

3. Answer repeat questions

Pull from your content library to fill in answers to repeat questions. If anything needs to be reviewed by a subject matter expert, be sure to get their eyes on it before submission.

4. Note due dates and tasks

Whose expertise do you need? After you determine the requirements, identify all the milestones. There’ll be due dates for content, reviews, edits and approvals. The trick is to respect everyone’s time while driving the process forward.

5. Assign questions for review

Who needs to sign off on this content? Generally, you’ll have multiple approvers to sign-off on content related to sales, product, support, legal, branding and so on.

6. Review and polish

Make sure you’re telling YOUR story. Add visuals or other supporting content to help convey your message. If you have the good fortune to have a dedicated proposal team, look to them for proposal formatting guidance. If you don’t have a proposal team, look to your marketing team. Ensure your proposal is in a clean, easy-to-read format. Or, even better, put it into a branded template.

7. Proofread

Don’t let poor grammar and typos be the reason you lose the bid.

8. Submit to issuer

Push send with no regrets.

The Benchmark Report: Proposal Management

Learn about the state of proposal management, and see what teams need to do to be successful moving forward.

Read the report here.

Best practices for responding to an RFP

Whether you have a dedicated team of stakeholders from each department or you assign a new team for each project, what matters most is that everyone in the organization recognizes that they have skin in the game.

RFP wins, proactive sales proposals and fast turnaround on questionnaires equate to revenue and may determine whether the company grows, shrinks, or offers an extra percentage point in next year’s retirement fund match.

Build the right team

Proposal managers lead the proposal team. Proposal managers may think of themselves as the director of a motion picture. After that “Directed by” end title flashes, another three minutes of credits roll by.

The proposal team I’m referring to is made up of the individuals you rely on for a variety of roles:

  • Prospect and customer interaction – Customer-facing teams have their fingers on the pulse of competitors and customer needs.
  • Subject matter expertise – Many RFP questions require detailed answers, and for those you should turn to the people who know the most about their particular area of expertise.
  • Brand messaging – Consult with marketing before submitting your response to ensure that you are on brand.
  • IT support – Can your company support the issuer’s needs?

… and all of the others who are vital to creating a winning proposal.

Even a one-person proposal department needs input from internal or external SMEs to build a high-quality response.

Only respond to RFPs you can win

As part of your bid-qualifying at the beginning of your RFP response process, add a go/no-go checkpoint to ensure that you only respond to RFPs you can win. Whether it’s a scheduled team meeting or a checklist, you need to answer:

  • Is the RFP the right fit for your organization and solution?
  • Do you have a comprehensive solution that addresses all of the challenges presented in the request?
  • Does your pricing match the budget?
  • Do you have an existing or prior relationship with the issuing organization?
  • Do you have any insight into why the RFP has been issued?
  • Can you meet the submission deadline?

Basing the answers to these questions on data rather than anecdotal evidence will help validate the go/no-go step as well as your role as a proposal manager. The Responsive platform’s AI-powered analytics tools provide that data.

Respect contributors’ time

If you want SMEs and other stakeholders to feel a sense of ownership for their proposal responsibilities, then you have to respect their time. RFP responses will suffer if contributors end up working after hours and weekends, rushing to meet deadlines. Get their buy-in ahead of time on deadlines and time required for reviews and approvals.

Document your process

A documented RFP response process will anchor your team during the most chaotic times. It’s up to you to own the process, but RFP software will make it easier to automate, execute and monitor processes from beginning to end on multiple projects running simultaneously.

Conduct a win/loss review

The win-loss review gives your team an opportunity to close the loop. Internally evaluate what worked and what didn’t.

Did you win? Why? How can you repeat it for future proposals?

Did you lose? Why? How can you avoid it in future proposals?

Include the whole proposal team in a wrap-up summary, but make the extra effort to work hand-in-hand with sales enablement so they can bring in the customer perspective.

Let technology do the heavy lifting

Remember earlier when I said the RFP response process is cyclical? The win/loss review will inform your new go/no-go step, increasing your predictive accuracy of which RFPs you can actually win. It helps to have RFP software for a win-loss review because you have everything that went into the response—the planning, communication, content and the actual response—in one place.

Software is the single most effective way to overcome lack of time, experience and other resources. It’s the difference maker that will help you respond like a boss. With only 43 percent of organizations using RFP-specific technology, there’s a huge opportunity for you to get a leg up on competitors.

How Responsive can help

Responsive RFP software makes it easier to collaborate with an extended team and leverage the power of technology. With automated processes for scheduling, collaboration and completing wide swaths of massive RFPs using our industry-leading Content Library, you can blaze through the first pass of a response faster than working without RFP software or with less advanced software solutions.

You create more time to spend customizing the responses that really matter and focus on differentiating yourself from the competition. And that’s only the beginning!

Using software at every step in the RFP response process

Here’s a quick overview of how Responsive RFP software helps during each of the seven steps of RFP response:

  1. Qualify the bid — Check data from past similar RFPs. What took weeks without RFP software may only take hours or minutes with it. All things being equal, is this RFP winnable?
  2. Understand requirements — Let the tool create a checklist of open items based on what remains after the automated first pass conducted at intake by your Content Library.
  3. Answer commonly seen questions — Responsive RFP technology consolidates all your previous Q&A pairs into an intelligent content library, so you can automatically respond to repeat questions in just a few clicks.
  4. Assign due dates and tasks to key collaborators — Assign each RFP question or section as a task to individual collaborators from the project dashboard in Responsive. They’ll then receive a notification from where they’re already working (e.g., email, Slack, or Teams).
  5. Assign questions for review and approval — Simplify the review and approval process with automated reminders and cues across multiple platforms.
  6. Polish — From intake, work within a branded template and support answers with approved content that’s always up-to-date according to the SME in charge of that content.
  7. Proofread — Still important, but working with already-approved content will decrease how much you have to proofread.
  8. Submit to issuer — Push send from Responsive or your integrated CRM.

We recently created a Proposal Management Benchmark Report where we found that organizations using RFP software already managed 43 percent more RFPs than those who do not use RFP software. If you’re looking to speed ahead of the field in RFP response, then gain traction faster with RFP software.

I’ll just leave these other tidbits right here…

Recognize SMEs and salespeople at quarterly meetings. Salespeople are competitive and like to be recognized for winning.

Implement formal kickoff meetings for RFPs. Make them quick and include pre-reading materials in the invitation to hit the ground running. Some organizations combine this with a go/no-go checkpoint.

Hold 15-minute daily standup meetings or calls as you approach the RFP deadline. Focus on status reports and action items.

Commit to professional development time. Join this LinkedIn group, the response management Slack community, or connect with APMP. This is especially valuable for small shops, where it can be hard to build a network.

If this has inspired you to investigate RFP software, then request a Responsive demo today!

Why you need RFP software

Why you need RFP software

The response process should be scalable, repeatable, and consistent.

Perhaps you remember the childhood game of “telephone.” In the game, one person thinks of a sentence and then whispers it to the next person in line; that person then whispers it to the next in line, and so on. Once everyone has heard the sentence, the last person has to say it out loud. Almost invariably, the final sentence has very little in common with the original.

An RFP might land in someone’s inbox in a variety of formats, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or even as a PDF. You might share the RFP, or parts of it, with dozens of stakeholders, each with their own area of expertise.

You could even have multiple stakeholders working on a single question or a single subject matter expert (SME) working on multiple RFPs, which, without the right processes in place, leads to inconsistent responses—a giant red flag to procurement teams.

In other words, an RFP can be like a written game of telephone. Multiple hands without centralized processes can delay and distort the response, meaning the response manager might have to spend hours, days, or even weeks trying to craft a cohesive response out of an anything but cohesive array of answers.

The solution is RFP software that is advanced enough to frame a response process that is consistent, repeatable, and scalable, regardless of the number of stakeholders involved. Let’s explore how RFP software can smooth out the response process, enabling you to drive more revenue in less time.

What is RFP software?

Clothing sizes, sports referees, traffic, RFPs—is consistency too much to ask? To be fair, consistency can get a little boring, but consistency in the RFP response process leads to better responses and perhaps more time for you to enjoy more of the chaos we call life outside of work.

As much as we’d love it if all RFPs arrived in consistent formats, they don’t. An effective RFP response tool is the foundation of a fine-tuned RFP process, creating consistency, repeatability, and scalability—transforming any RFP format into a predictably easy-to-navigate response.

Intelligent RFP software is able to import documents into a single format that’s simple and easily accessible by each stakeholder. In turn, the stakeholders submit their answers via the online portal, so project managers, writers, SMEs, etc., know who said what, when it was said, and how to find it, every single time, regardless of the RFP’s original format.

Once answers are in the system, you can store the Q&A pairs in the Content Library, or as I like to call it, The Single Source of Truth, for future use. But SMEs don’t have to wait for an RFP to add vital information to the Content Library. As they accumulate knowledge, rather than storing it on paper or in their heads (surprisingly common), they can add it to the Content Library, where it will remain accessible to all who need it.

Additionally, RFPIO’s advanced RFP software is a project management platform, with features such as assigning and tracking roles and responsibilities, scheduled review cycles, trend analytics, built-in collaboration tools, and seamless integration with the most popular CRMs and other sales tools.

In short, RFPIO software is both a scalable content management system and a project management tool, allowing teams to respond to more of the right bids in less time.

Perhaps less tangibly, but as importantly, it instills trust in SMEs and other stakeholders, as they know that their efforts won’t be duplicated or wasted and that there’s a single repository of consistent and repeatable company knowledge. This enables companies to build on things as opposed to just trying to keep afloat.

Fundamental features to look for in RFP software

The two main features to look for in RFP response technology are project and content management. While response teams might function with one or the other feature, it’s far more difficult.

You can answer RFPs without an automated and intuitive content management system, but that would make them a lot more difficult. On the other hand, you could have just a content database, but you’d lose context, such as where the content is, where the gaps are, and where you have old information that’s being pulled in without actually doing the RFPs.

Still, organizations should look for what their specific needs are. What are the most significant pain points? How will the needs grow in the future?

The most common pain points we hear are:

  • Too much time spent on responses – An up-to-date and easily accessible content library means the difference between tracking stakeholders down and clicking a few buttons.
  • Low response capacity – More often than not, low response capacity comes from trying to do too much. All too often, replying to each and every RFP is seen as the safer bet. Imagine if dating singles took the same approach. Instead of “swiping right” on every opportunity, choose those that fit. An automated response process can help you choose wisely and simplify those worth pursuing. More importantly, automation helps ensure that responses are accurate and on time, but also compelling and competitive, which helps propel your bid to the top of the stack.
  • Disjointed workflow – For proposal teams, a disjointed workflow is a confidence killer! When stakeholders cannot follow the process, they may find themselves wondering “why bother?” RFPIO’s project management features ensure up-to-the-minute statuses on each proposal. And when someone is stuck, others can see where they are stuck and help.
  • Inconsistent deliverables – RFP software eliminates the differences between formats, makes questions easy to locate, and simplifies collaboration, even in siloed organizations. Perhaps more significantly, RFP software enforces rules and parameters, such as character limits.

Why you need RFP software

Since the start of the COVID pandemic, the growth of remote work opportunities has brought the term “distributed workforce” into the mainstream. However, with worldwide offices, multiple brands under single umbrellas, etc., distributed workforces have been around for a very long time.

It’s common for a response to require SMEs from multiple time zones or for a single SME to work on responses from half the world away, and even from different brands under their corporate umbrella.

Response software such as RFPIO allows for different versions of questions and answers. So rather than responding to each RFP from scratch, RFPIO lets SMEs add to or change content to tailor each RFP, ensuring that there’s less of a risk of discrepancies.

RFPIO features include:

  • Content management – Repeatable company information in a single source, ready to go at the click-of-a-button.
  • Integrations – RFPIO seamlessly integrates with more than two dozen of the most popular CRMs, project management systems, communication apps, sales enablement tools, etc.
  • Automation – RFPIO continually learns as you work and suggests answers as you go, providing repeatability. The platform also automatically transfers RFPs from multiple formats into a single, consistent, accessible, predictable one.
  • A unique, project-based pricing approach – User-based pricing limits response teams, creates bottlenecks and incentivizes teams to limit their use of SMEs. Instead, RFPIO includes unlimited users in all of the pricing levels.
  • Scalability – RFPIO has no data or user limits. The software grows as the company grows and changes. Moreover, as the RFP industry evolves, so does RFPIO, without burdening existing tech stacks..

How RFP software can help

I will let you in on a little secret. RFP software, even cutting-edge RFP software such as RFPIO, is not a magic wand. It will never replace response teams, but advanced RFP technology will make their jobs more efficient and productive, ultimately making everyone, even CFOs, happy.

However, the only way RFP software can truly add value is if it works with response management teams rather than the other way around. That includes:

More productive collaboration

Improving collaboration is key to effective RFP management. Most organizations have distributed workforces, and even those that don’t might have off-premises response stakeholders and SMEs.

Chasing people down for answers is a waste of time. RFPIO allows any stakeholder to log in at any time and see exactly what is being asked of them.

Integrations

RFP software should work with tech stacks instead of adding to them. RFPIO does precisely that by seamlessly integrating with more than two dozen of the most popular workplace tools, including:

  • CRM – Break down the silos between sales and response teams with CRM integrations, including Salesforce, Dynamics 365, Pipedrive, PipelineDeals, and HubSpot
  • Communication apps – Stay in touch with stakeholders with Google Hangouts, Jira, Microsoft Teams, and Slack
  • Cloud storage – Sharepoint, Box, Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive
  • SSO authentication – Login through Microsoft ADFS, Microsoft Azure, OneLogin, and Okta
  • Browser extensions – Access RFPIO through Chromium Edge or Google Chrome
  • Vendor assessment – Streamline security questionnaires through Whistic
  • Productivity – Import RFPs from nearly any format, including Microsoft Suites, Google Sheets, and PDFs
  • Sales enablement – Import and export content using Seismic or Highspot

RFPIO’s project management features allow project managers to ensure efficiency, establish roles and deadlines, protect your RFP response content, and curate and cultivate your Content Library.

Automated import process

Manual imports are the most time-consuming part of the RFP response process. RFPIO’s advanced import tools turn RFPs from nearly any format into consistent and easily-collaborative content.

Content Library

As I’ve mentioned, consistency is key in response management. In fact, repeating yourself is perhaps the easiest way to streamline your response process, especially since most questions are repeats, or at least variations on questions you’ve seen before.

Keep all your content in one easily accessible place with RFPIO’s AI-empowered Content Library. When you encounter one of those repeated questions, the Content Library will automatically suggest a company-approved answer. All you have to do is click a button and tailor the answer if needed.

knowledge management tool decreases RFP response time by:

  • Providing a searchable information hub
  • Housing reusable content
  • Enabling customization using previous responses
  • Facilitating content accuracy

AI-powered recommendation engine

We like to think of RFPIO as a response team’s brilliant assistant. Stumped on a question or you don’t have time to scour the database? That’s what the AI-powered recommendation engine is for. It:

  • Answers common repetitive questions
  • Auto-identifies response content
  • Assigns questions to pertinent SMEs

Enhanced security

RFPIO’s multi-level security enhancements protect organizations’ most valuable assets, company knowledge, with RFPIO’s state-of-the-art security controls.

  • SSO – Using Single Sign-On, you won’t have to memorize passwords. Simply login using your company credentials.
  • Automate user management – Automatically delete users when they leave the company
  • 2-factor authentication – If your company doesn’t use SSO, RFPIO also supports 2-factor authentication.
  • Control access – Define what users can and can’t see.

Let’s talk about the bigger picture. The ultimate goal of more effective RFP management is to win more business! RFPIO gives response management teams more time to craft better answers to more RFPs. It sounds simple, right? Again, it’s all about scalability, repeatability, and consistency.

With RFPIO, you can increase your win potential by responding to the right opportunities in a consistent, repeatable voice, using consistent, scalable answers in a repeatable, easily collaborative, and searchable format.

Scale your team’s ability to answer RFPs

By optimizing the amount of time spent on repetitive manual processes, your team is freed up to dedicate their resources to pursuing new business.

Produce higher quality responses, consistently

In a highly competitive landscape, businesses cannot afford to gamble by underperforming at the proposal stage. RFP software enables consistency through dependable accuracy, helping ensure finely-tuned responses, and creating reliable deliverables through export functionality.

Start winning more bids with RFPIO

RFPIO is the industry-leading response management platform, designed to securely increase RFP win rates and drive revenue.  Learn more by scheduling a Free Demo

Now, if only we could do something about clothing sizes.

Next, we’ll discuss knowledge management best practices.

What is RFP software?

What is RFP software?

In many companies, proposal and sales teams are stretched to their limits. Even though high-revenue sales requests often arrive via RFP, it’s often easiest to grab those ready-to-close sales leads, even if it means less revenue.

Feature-rich advanced RFP software allows overstretched response management and sales departments to reach for the brass rings—those winnable and profitable RFPs—using significantly fewer employee hours and resources.

If your organization uses dated software or a manual RFP process, or if time constraints prohibit RFP responses altogether, read on to learn about RFP software and how it could benefit your organization.

What is an RFP?

A request for proposal (RFP) is a document that a buyer issues to suppliers that outlines the product or service requirements for procurement. RFPs come in a variety of different formats and narratives (similar to essay questions).

An RFP is the highest form of communication in the procurement process. Most deals are for more than $20,000—often significantly more, like with extra zeros and another comma. They are most common in government, software, insurance, business services, healthcare, and other complex, highly-regulated industries.

Security questionnaires determine whether a vendor (or even the vendor’s vendors) is compliant with the customer’s security requirements. They may include questions about security and privacy, business continuity management, supply chain management, business continuity management, etc. Not surprisingly, security questionnaires are lengthy and complicated, sometimes with hundreds of questions.

Additionally, there are requests for quotes (RFQ)—typically for purchasing goods rather than services—and requests for information (RFI). RFQs, as you might imagine, are about the bottom line, which makes sense when purchasing several gross of industrial screws, but not services that require a more bespoke approach. On the other hand, an RFI might be used to narrow potential suppliers down for future RFP solicitations.

Of course, RFPs often include RFQs, security questionnaires, and RFIs.

What are the objectives of an RFP?

The main objective of an RFP is for organizations to formally announce that they are opening a project for bids. RFPs are more formal and exacting than simple requests for pricing, and they’re typically for larger purchases.

An RFP will describe the needs and expectations of the issuer’s project and create the parameters to compare solutions.

RFPs generally require specific information about regulatory compliance, security, etc. In fact, it helps to think of an RFP response as the precursor to a sales contract and something that would even pass muster with legal departments—and quite often, legal has to approve responses before they’re sent to the customer.

RFPs ask for accurate, compliant, contract-ready answers to customer questions. Compare it to purchasing a house. You might want to know the current state of water or electrical systems, and as part of the presales contract process, the homeowner has to submit the answers in writing. The seller is then legally bound to the accuracy of their answers.

Common problems in the RFP response process

The RFP response is more complex than the uninitiated might think, which is why manual processes only allow for a couple of responses per year. There are a few notable challenges in the RFP response process, including:

The workload – Single RFPs often include hundreds of pages, requiring input from multiple stakeholders. Imagine answering dozens of RFPs per year when you use manual processes!

Content quality – You have one shot at answering an RFP correctly. Content should be centralized, current, and accurate, which requires advanced cataloging.

Collaboration – If an answer isn’t in your content library, the RFP will require collaboration, which means consulting with subject matter experts (SMEs). Having multiple people provide different answers is like herding cats, and extremely difficult without response management.

Detail – RFPs require impeccably detailed and accurate answers using existing knowledge and collaboration from SMEs.

Deadline – RFP deadlines are firm and many responses are time stamped. Missing a deadline by just a few seconds can rule your company out. Response management should keep you on track throughout the response process.

Consistency – An RFP response process should ensure consistent and on-time deliverables.

What are the three levels of RFP software?

There are three levels of RFP software. The first, manual processes, include some software, such as documents, spreadsheets, and a folder tree, but little else. Manual processes are generally acceptable for companies that only respond to a couple of RFPs a year.

I typically refer to the next level of RFP software as “the document suites.” This includes word-processing software composed of essential collaboration tools, content management, templates, and formatting. Document suites are suitable for companies that answer a handful of RFPs each year.

When RFP-based deals are an essential source of revenue, most organizations opt for the third level—a Response Management solution. These solutions help businesses with responses ranging from RFPs to security questionnaires, and offer the most advanced functionality for creating RFPs and managing their workflows. They save time, money, and costly errors through machine learning, robust integrations, and comprehensive and intuitive content management tools.

What are the benefits of RFP software?

RFP software solutions remove most of the above challenges by automating as much as 80% of the response process.

To a harried response manager, RFP software is a game-changer. To their employer, RFP software offers a demonstrably impressive return on investment.

Because RFPs are unique, even when they come from existing customers, and because businesses and regulatory requirements are in near-constant flux, most responses require additional input from SMEs. Through RFP software automation, but still at the response manager’s discretion, the SMEs’ answers will then go into the content library for future use.

Features of Response Management software

RFP solutions are capable solutions designed to help organizations engage with external stakeholders in an efficient, strategic, and consistent manner. They support the process of responding to customers and other stakeholders by leveraging new developments in machine learning and collaborative cloud technology to break down knowledge silos and automate repetitive tasks.

Responding to RFPs is one of the most popular response management use cases, and for this reason, most solutions have been designed to meet the specific needs of proposal managers.

So what are the key features?

Machine learning – With machine learning, you are the teacher. The system learns how you work and how you answer questions, enabling a click-of-a-button response the next time you encounter similar queries.

Scalability – A scalable solution that can grow and adapt to support your company as its operations grow and business needs change

Workflow Automation – Customizable automated workflows and dozens of integrations allow for easy collaboration.

Professional Document Production – Create professional high-fidelity response documents with the correct formatting in just a few keystrokes.

Data insights – Analyzing the efficiency of the RFP response process requires good reporting, including tracking the response team’s progress, the types of responses you’re issuing (and winning), win/loss analysis, etc. You shouldn’t be limited to the data the software designer thinks is important. RFPIO lets you create reports the way you want them. If you use reporting suites, we probably integrate with them too.

Advanced Content Management – RFP software solutions provide enterprise-grade content management to ensure content repositories are current and complete.

The benefits of using RFP software

Has this ever happened to you? The moment you begin reading a proposal request, you experience a sense of déjà vu. It’s not your imagination. You have answered most of these questions before…many times before.

Most of a typical RFP includes relatively standard questions. RFP software automates most of the response process, freeing you to consult with SMEs and coordinate the response process.

Optimized workflow

RFPIO optimizes workflow by smoothing out the content creation process, establishing workflow roles, providing selective collaboration, curating and cultivating your content library, and letting you spend more time on presentations instead of herding cats.

With RFPIO software, users can rename and customize fields and intake forms, and customize frameworks and business processes. RFPIO software is a tool that fits with your processes instead of the other way around. In fact, RFPIO integrates with more workflow tools than any other response management platform.

Unified collaboration

The response process can include dozens of stakeholders from multiple departments and time zones. Timely collaboration can be a challenge, but not with RFPIO. RFPIO integrates with most project management and messaging apps, and collaboration is built into RFPIO’s platform.

RFPIO’s collaborative tools allow you to:

  • Consolidate project-specific conversations – Never lose track of comment threads again.
  • Break down knowledge silos – Each stakeholder on a response has a singular goal…winning the bid! RFPIO allows you to share knowledge with stakeholders as needed, and vice versa.
  • Track progress of response completion – See whether the project is running on time and whether each stakeholder is doing their part.

Improved win rates

The average RFP win rate is 45%. Advanced response software uses AI to streamline the response process, which means you have more time to respond to more RFPs and win more bids. Additionally, RFPIO’s Content Library helps improve response quality by suggesting pre-approved answers to most queries, leading to an increased win rate.

Even if your win rate has only nominal gains, you will still produce more revenue because, as with many other things, RFP response is a numbers game. If you have the time to respond to more RFPs, you will have more victories and drive revenue.

“Since implementing RFPIO, we’ve been able to do so much more with the same headcount. We’ve increased efficiency by at least 30-35%. We’ve diverted the effort and time to more value-added activities, creating a win-win both for the organization and the team members”.
Shashi K, Assistant VP of Content at Genpact

RFPIO’s project management features help expedite response turnaround time, scale response capacity, and facilitate consistent deliverables.

The RFPIO approach

RFPIO is the most advanced RFP solution on the market

“RFPIO is perfect! 10 out of 10, a hundred percent 10 out of 10. RFPIO is a superb product. It is the best platform for RFP management out there.”
Jack Pierce, Proposal Team Manager, Accruent

Features include:

Proprietary import and export technology

Most RFPs show up in your inbox as Word or Excel docs. Some appear as PDFs, which less advanced RFP response platforms can’t read. RFPIO simplifies the import/export process, even with PDFs, thereby shortening the response time and delivering accurate, timely, and impressive bids. RFPIO’s industry-leading import/export features include:

  • Machine-learning-driven functionality that interprets questionnaires and parses them into components.
  • Specific functionality for the import of several standard questionnaire formats (CAIQ, CORL, ILPA, etc.)
  • Modern, intuitive UX for guiding our machine learning during import.

Adaptive knowledge library

The most time-consuming part of the response process isn’t strategizing. It isn’t even herding those metaphorical cats. Most of an RFP’s questions have probably been answered before, whether for that customer or others—sometimes several others. Answering those redundant questions is where the bulk of response time lies.

RFPIO’s AI-enhanced Content Library expedites the response process by automatically providing pre-approved answers to those tedious questions with just a few keystrokes. RFPIO’s web-based Content Library includes:

  • Auto-suggested answers
  • Auto-assigned content to relevant owners
  • Intelligent, easy search function
  • Cloud-based content storage

Built-in integrations

RFPIO is scalable and seamlessly integrates with over two dozen of the most popular sales enablement tools, productivity apps, CRMs, cloud storage providers, communication platforms, and SSO authentication software products.

  • CRMs – RFPIO integrates with the most popular customer relationship management (CRM) tools, including Salesforce, Hubspot, and several others. Users can start, monitor, and collaborate on projects within the CRM. For example, with the click of a couple of buttons, the RFP goes from Salesforce to RFPIO and puts compliant content at the finger of frontline teams.
  • Communication apps – Distributed workforces have made communication apps such as Slack and Microsoft Teams a modern necessity. RFPIO functions within those apps to keep teams aligned and projects on track.
  • Cloud Storage – RFPIO integrates with Google Drive, Google Cloud, Sharepoint, OneDrive, etc., so all documents can be stored in the cloud.
  • SSO authentication – Users can log into RFPIO through Microsoft ADFS, Microsoft Azure, Okta, or OneLogin.
  • Vendor assessment – RFPIO teams with Whistic to seamlessly import third-party vendor security questionnaires.
  • Browser extensions – Stakeholders can access the company content library directly through Chromium Edge or Google Chrome.
  • Productivity – RFPIO users can search, import, and export using productivity tools such as Google Docs and Microsoft Suite applications.
  • Sales enablement – Two-way RFPIO integrations with Seismic and Highspot allow users to import and export collateral, spreadsheets, diagrams, etc. between apps, and improve collaboration between sales, presales, and executives.

Robust project management tools

RFPIO’s management solution alleviates common challenges in meeting deadlines with better workflow assessment, even with distributed workforces. RFPIO Project management capabilities include:

  • Trend analytics – Using insightful at-a-glance dashboards, built-in analytics allows users to analyze time and resources dedicated to an RFP, and track which questions are answered manually or through the content library.
  • Task management – RFPIO breaks projects into bite-sized pieces and helps project managers assign tasks to those who aren’t buried under other responsibilities, and track progress.
  • Review cycles – Multiple stakeholder RFPs should have multiple stakeholder review processes. RFPIO allows companies to set up review cycles on questions, sections, or the entire RFP.

Deliver better proposals with RFP software

If your team is reluctant to respond to even winnable RFPs because of a lack of time and resources, or if your RFP win rate is less than impressive, it’s worth a few minutes to learn more about RFPIO’s time-saving and bid-winning response management software.

Engage your proposal team with the right collaboration tools

Engage your proposal team with the right collaboration tools

This is the fourth and final post in our series #StayConnected, introducing tips, tricks, tools, and features that help teams complete proposals quickly and efficiently, even when they’re not sharing a physical space.

Check out our previous posts here: Keep Your Proposal Team Focused With These 5 Project Management Features, How an Effective Content Management System Keeps Your Remote Team Productive, Refine Your RFP Process to Keep Your Multilingual Team Connected.

Proposal teams know better than anyone that complex questionnaires like bids, tenders, and RFPs are one of the most collaborative projects an organization undertakes. A single RFP can require input from dozens of individuals across an organization.

So how do you facilitate collaboration across such a complex team?

After asking several successful proposal managers about their workflow, we determined highly collaborative proposal teams do four key things:

1) Clarify roles and responsibilities
2) Simplify communication
3) Enable team members to work in tandem, and
4) Streamline the review and approval process.

Read on to learn more about how successful proposal teams are improving collaboration across their team, wherever in the world they might be.

Clarify roles and responsibilities using project management tools

Before implementing proposal automation software, many proposal teams told us they used to assign tasks using a color-code system within a static document, like a Word Document or Excel Spreadsheet. In this system, SMEs and other team members would be responsible for responding to questions in a certain color.

As one can imagine, this system resulted in people responding to questions that didn’t belong to them, responding to some (but not all) of their assigned questions, or ignoring the email altogether.

That’s why clarifying roles and responsibilities using project management tools is instrumental in streamlining collaboration.

Proposal managers that use RFPIO will upload the questionnaire onto the platform, break the project into bite-sized chunks, and assign sections to each of their team members.

Each team member will only see their assigned, uncompleted tasks on their personal dashboard. As they mark tasks “complete”, they will disappear from their dashboard—leaving no room for confusion about which tasks they’re responsible for and what they have left to do.

Simplify communication by bringing your team on a single platform

The harder it is to communicate with your colleagues, the more difficult it is to collaborate.

If your team is working within a Word Document, what happens when a team member needs help on a given question?

They may paste the question into an email to their colleague. Or perhaps they’ll give them a call, or search through their email inbox or previous documents to see if they can find the answer there.

Using RFPIO, you can @-mention the person whose help they need, without leaving the app. That person will then receive a notification according to their preference—either in-app, via email or on their third-party collaboration tool of choice (i.e. Slack, Microsoft Teams, or Google Hangouts).

They can then respond to your question directly from their communication platform of choice—be it email, Slack, Teams, or Hangouts—and their answer will populate in the RFPIO app.

Successful proposal teams can also use RFPIO to access their organization’s content management system directly from third-party collaboration tools they’re already using. In a few clicks of a button, they can find information about anything you have stored in your content library—from the most up-to-date company description to next quarter’s product roadmap.

Work together in real-time with collaborative editing

Your team has just gotten all the answers back from your SMEs, which means you can start working on polishing the answers.

You and the other proposal writer on your team decide to break up the work: you’ll take questions 25-50 and they’ll take 50-75.

You spend the next two hours rewriting sentences, strengthening value statements, and switching out words. As you finish up question 50, you send your colleague your questions so they can compile them all into the same document.

Your colleague responds immediately, “I thought I was doing questions 25-50….”

Ooph.

Proposal managers have told us breaking down silos between team members is one of the most important aspects to a collaborative RFP process—and a big part of that is creating real-time visibility into who’s working on projects.

That’s where concurrent editing comes into play. With concurrent editing, your team can see who’s editing a question, in real-time.

Not only does this help avoid repeat work, it also reduces the amount of time it takes to finalize a document or project and eliminates the typical back-and-forth of the review process—bringing your team closer together and making sure proposals get in on time.

“RFPIO provides a sense of community because we are beginning to work all in one place and can communicate with each other by sending comments back-and-forth. It’s bringing our RFP writers closer to both the subject matter experts and also the salespeople.”

-Patti Passow, Senior Proposal Specialist, 

Illuminate Education

Streamline the approval process with automated review

You’ve finished polishing your content and you’re ready to send it off for review.

But anyone who has tried to gather approvals knows how it feels when you’re waiting on an approval hours before the RFP is due—which is why simplifying the review process is key to smooth collaboration and a successful RFP process.

When you use proposal automation, you can streamline the approval process by setting up an automated review cycle. As soon as questions are ready for review, they are kicked over to the next person in your review cycle—for example, your legal team. As soon as your legal team reviews and approves, the software will automatically pass it on to your leadership for final approval.

Your legal team and leadership can review and approve content as they are ready. This means that you’re not overwhelming your reviewers with hundreds of questions last minute—and you can say good-bye to late nights and last-minute revisions.


While the general perception of remote teams is that they are divided, disconnected, and fragmented, the reality is much more optimistic. Luckily, teams, remote or otherwise, are as strong as the systems and collaboration tools that hold them together. Click here to learn more about how RFPIO’s in-app collaboration tools can help your team stay connected and focused.

 

Keep your proposal team focused with these 5 project management features

Keep your proposal team focused with these 5 project management features

This is the first post in our series #StayConnected, introducing tips, tricks, tools, and features that help teams complete proposals quickly and efficiently, even when they’re not sharing a physical space.

As any proposal manager is well aware, a single RFP may require input from dozens of stakeholders—and it’s up to the proposal manager to work their magic to pull all this disparate information into a compelling proposal.

While maintaining a high level of collaboration when your entire time is working at home may seem daunting at first, doing so successfully is just a matter of establishing effective systems.

To help you find the system that’s right for you, our team compiled everything we know about how our customers are using RFPIO to successfully manage proposal projects—beginning to end—with a remote team.

Read on to see how RFPIO’s project management capabilities create visibility into project status, clarify responsibilities, and facilitate communication—and learn how to apply these lessons to your process to keep your team focused and connected.

1. Make well-informed decisions with built-in trend analytics

A new RFP has landed in your inbox—it’s go-time.

But this isn’t your first rodeo. You know that before you can pick up your pen (uh… mouse), you need to decide whether the RFP is even worth the effort. In other words, you need to be sure this RFP is one you can win.

Responders using RFP software equipped with built-in analytics can answer that question right out of the gate.

When creating a new project (RFP, RFI, etc.) in RFPIO, for example, they can click open a “trend analysis” to understand how many resources and how much time was required to complete similar projects in the past.

They can also see how many questions were answered using auto-response/stored answers versus manual responses, providing valuable insights into ROI—since the more questions your team can respond to using content stored in your Content Library, the less time they need to spend writing fresh answers.

2. Capture the opportunity in your CRM of choice

After deciding to respond, you need to make sure your sales team—and everyone at your organization, for that matter—has visibility into project status.

With RFPIO, you can associate your project with an existing opportunity in your preferred CRM, be it Salesforce, Dynamics, Pipedrive, Pipelinedeals, or Hubspot. With all relevant data in one place, your entire team can find information about deadlines, progress status, and author review summaries right in the platform they’re already using.

That means your sales team has access to all the information they need in just a few clicks—and your proposal team can stay focused on their assigned tasks.

3. Easily manage projects by clarifying responsibilities and assigning tasks

According to the 2019 RFPIO Responder Survey, 1 in 4 proposal managers said their biggest challenge is not being able to focus on priorities because they’re wearing too many hats.

An easy way to fix this is to clarify roles and responsibilities, starting with breaking projects into bite-sized pieces and assigning tasks to team members. Once you’ve set everything up in your CRM of choice, you’re ready to delegate tasks to the rest of your team.

Before inadvertently assigning tasks to a team member who is already neck-deep in another project, you can check the user report to see who on your response management team has the bandwidth to take on new responsibilities—helping reduce burnout on your team.

Once you’ve finished delegating tasks for your RFP project, collaborators automatically receive an email clearly outlining their responsibilities.

While your project is humming along, managers get real-time visibility into the status of all the individual components within a project, individual team members’ workloads, and overall proposal operations for better resource planning and uncovering roadblocks before they happen—ensuring your team stays ahead of deadlines.

4. Efficiently communicate with built-in collaboration tools

As your team is answering their assigned questions, they will likely need some help from your technical experts.

To do this, all they have to do is @-mention your resident SME in the comment section of the question they need help on. Your SME will then receive a notification in their inbox—and RFPIO will automatically send follow-up emails until they’ve answered the question.

After your SME is notified that their assistance is needed, they can directly respond to the question by simply replying to the message. Their response will then be automatically populated into the comment section of your project.

This helps your proposal team keep all relevant information together in one place—and allows your SMEs to offer their sage wisdom on the fly without leaving the platforms they’re already using.

Lauren Daitz, the Senior Manager of the Proposal Department at HALO Recognition, told us that the SMEs at her company have an RFPIO filter in their email, so they can easily respond to a few questions whenever they have a free moment (or when they find themselves sitting in a meeting they don’t necessarily need to be part of).

5. Submit proposals that your entire team can be proud of

The final—and possibly most satisfying—step of the proposal process is submitting your proposal to the issuer.

But before you can do that, you need to make sure your proposal tells a compelling story—and, of course, that each of the answers you’ve provided is accurate and on-brand.

This means you need to get leaders across departments involved. With RFPIO, you can set up review cycles on a question- or section-level. A single question can have as many reviewers as you’d like, enabling your management, technical, and legal teams to seamlessly provide their stamp of approval—all while empowering you to submit compelling proposals that will help your organization win more deals.

“RFPIO helped us win business by empowering us to make better use of our time. Instead of hunting down answers to pull together a proposal, we’re now able to spend our extra time creating compelling win messages.”

-Brian Trigg, Director of Sales Operations, FireEye

While the general perception of remote teams is that they are divided, disconnected, and fragmented, the reality is much more optimistic. All teams, remote or otherwise, are as strong as the systems and collaboration tools that hold them together. Click here to learn more about how RFPIO’s project management features can help your team stay connected and focused.

Why you need RFP translation to win more business globally

Why you need RFP translation to win more business globally

In today’s global economy, opportunity abounds for companies seeking revenue growth. It takes a concerted effort to create momentum around your product and build trust. But, it doesn’t stop there. RFP responses greatly impact your revenue team’s potential and your organization’s ability to expand.

Breaking down language barriers in the RFP response process is integral to your global expansion efforts. Since your team and prospects span oceans and time zones, know that RFP translation makes content accessible and clear. And that RFP software is here to support your process.

Why RFP translation?

In an RFPIO customer Facebook survey, we asked whether RFP responders thought RFP response collaboration or processes affected team productivity most…89% voted for effective collaboration.

To drive RFP response success, effective collaboration is a must-have for navigating complexities. Growing your business globally increases that complexity, down to the very language your team members and prospects speak.

During an RFP project, you inevitably bring in subject matter experts from different fields. Just because you’re a US-headquartered company doesn’t mean those experts will live in the United States or speak English as their first language. You might have branches or satellite offices in different countries.

According to Dr. Robert S. Frey: “Working with culturally diverse technical subject matter experts across the world presents meaningful opportunities (and challenges) for proposal professionals.” When working with prospects at global organizations, the same communication rules apply.

You need faster response rates to save money and boost time management. And you need a project management tool that’s intuitive and interactive when it comes to RFP content management.

RFP software is a universally useful tool. If your RFP software has an integrated language translation piece, you’re sure to exponentially improve your collaborative efforts and drive home a quality RFP response.

Collaboration is all about effective and efficient communication. Nothing helps this effort more than literally speaking someone’s language. Which is why RFP translation is essential to your RFP response process.

RFP translation: Garner trust and confidence

When you receive an RFP, this is your revenue team’s chance to build an effective business relationship even before a sale ever closes. This is the time to cultivate a partner and establish congenial and helpful rapport.

With RFP response language translation, it’s easier to garner trust and confidence from prospects. No matter where they are in the sales cycle, you’re the product or service provider going the extra mile by speaking their language. They won’t have to do the extra work of translating anything, because your RFP software does it for them.

The key to successful RFPs lies in generating and maintaining the best content. Highly effective RFP response content speaks to the nuances of various target audiences.

Language barriers are a big deal—and even, a potential deal-breaker. Utilizing language translation inside your RFP software keeps content on point, speaking to the audience in their native language.

Stay consistent and compliant with RFP translation

Brendan Blok is the global business advisor and pre-sales manager at Basware. Before using RFPIO, their RFP content was drafted primarily in English and stored in various multiple spreadsheets. Local pre-sales reps in Germany, France, and Finland performed ad-hoc RFP translation, resulting in cumbersome, inconsistent, and error-prone RFP responses.

Such errors are damaging in today’s international economic environment. The EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) went into effect on May 25, 2018. The penalties for noncompliance can be crippling. Certain European countries have paragraphs that say you’re not allowed to conduct business internationally with two different languages.

To stay in compliance, you can no longer use individual translators when conducting international business in the European Union because of the potential for human error when it comes to data protection. This means businesses must rely on things like analytics, algorithms, and artificial intelligence for translation capabilities.

In today’s global commerce milieu, you can’t do business without accurate, consistent language translation. Responding to an RFP is certainly no exception.

Win more business globally with RFP software

RFPIO customers use our RFP translation tool to collaborate efficiently, win RFP responses, and grow their business on a global scale. More language offerings are in the making. Today RFPIO supports 16 languages, including:

  • Chinese
  • German
  • Norwegian
  • Russian
  • Swedish
  • Finnish
  • Portuguese
  • Korean
  • Greek
  • Italian
  • French
  • Spanish
  • Japanese
  • Polish
  • Danish
  • Dutch

Overcoming language barriers during the RFP response process is immensely rewarding. In doing so, you harness the powerhouse that is human collaboration.

Ready to use RFPIO’s language translation to expand revenue? Schedule a demo to strengthen your RFP content.

RFP Software Helps Basware with Language Translation

RFP Software Helps Basware with Language Translation

As the saying goes, it takes a village to respond to an RFP (or something like that). When that village includes people from all over the world, responding to companies in cross-continental locations, translated content can mean having a leg up on your competition. However, the RFP translation process is where things can get tricky…unless you have the right RFP software.

Basware is a company that has figured out this conundrum. Basware’s supply chain technology helps companies automate their invoicing process. The company is based in Finland, has a US headquarters in Fort Mill, South Carolina and serves Fortune 500 enterprises located across the world, like BMW, Heineken, and NBC Universal.

And that’s where RFPIO comes in. To date, 17 languages are supported in RFPIO’s Content Library—more languages will be added over time. Spanish, German, Russian, Japanese, and Finnish are among your content translation options.

Basware chose RFPIO because of these capabilities, and has seen a marked improvement in their RFP response processes worldwide.

RFP content translation without RFP software

According to Brendan Blok, global business advisor and pre-sales manager at Basware, their RFP content was mostly drafted in English by a dedicated content team in Romania, and stored in a variety of spreadsheets.

“Basware is a global company that operates all over the world. We have a big need for French and German content mostly, but also Finnish, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and many other languages. Responding to RFPs and RFIs only in English wasn’t sufficient.”

When translations were needed, it often fell upon pre-sales reps around the world to translate content into their local languages before submitting to potential customers. This cumbersome process took more time and left room for error because it was hard to assure accuracy and quality across the board.

So they looked for RFP software that could help with translation, and found RFPIO.

brendan blok

“RFPIO has helped us handle those language translations and store the information, so we could grow our global knowledge base. We’ve really been able to streamline the process.”

RFPIO offers RFP translation, storage, and support

“The big win for us, and the reason that we ultimately ended up going with RFPIO, was that none of the other applications we looked at during the RFP software selection process had comparable language support capabilities,” Brendan said. “Some could store content in other languages, but we needed the translation support as well.

Keeping content current had been a struggle for Brendan and team as well. RFPIO’s collaboration capabilities has made it possible for product managers and other subject matter experts to jump in and contribute knowledge at a moment’s notice.

RFP software has also made it easier to remove what they aren’t using. “Content was our biggest challenge. Besides having very good content, we had tons of content that was old, irrelevant, incorrect, duplicate. In RFPIO, you can easily purge that stuff and maintain a clean knowledge database.”

But it took just the right person to tackle the content so they decided to bring in an expert editor and hired David Rynne, an experienced business writer, to manage content and to be the administrator of the RFPIO platform. “I am editing the entire database, so all translations will be correct. I’ve also been troubleshooting and teaching people within the organization how to use the tool.”

david rynne

“We’ve had one and two-day turnarounds on RFPs thanks to RFPIO.”

RFP software increases submissions by 73%

“One of our pre-sales reps from Paris told us just recently that he received an RFP on a Monday night that needed to be submitted by that Wednesday morning. We helped him get up and running in RFPIO and he made the deadline. He thought that was really cool,” David said.

Basware responds mostly to RFPs, but they also respond to a number of RFIs, and security questionnaires. In the first few months of 2018, Brendan estimates they’d submitted about 22 RFPs. During that same time period in 2019, they’d completed 38—a 73 percent increase in efficiency.

As the platform administrator, David has had a positive experience with the RFPIO team. “Whenever I’ve had a question, you guys have been really responsive and accommodating to our requests. You’ve really gone above and beyond.”

Brendan echoed that same sentiment, “We get the best support I think I’ve ever seen when it comes to software, from RFPIO.”

Translate RFP content efficiently with RFPIO. Schedule a demo to get complete support during your RFP response journey.

15 RFP responders explain how to craft a winning RFP response

15 RFP responders explain how to craft a winning RFP response

RFP responders and issuers spend a lot of time in a world of documents that determine important business outcomes. Rarely do these professionals speak candidly with one another about the RFP response process—which is why we brought both parties together here on The Responsive Blog.

Recently 10 RFP issuers revealed their definition of a standout RFP response. This time we asked RFP responders to chime in with what it takes to craft a winning response. Enjoy this insightful content advice from 15 RFP responders in the trenches.

Content advice from RFP responders in the trenches

Brian Fleming, General Counsel and Proposal Management Specialist at CaseWorthy

It starts with an excellent executive summary. Know exactly what the client is struggling with (current state) and what they seek to accomplish with the procurement (future state). The executive summary should have a simple structure that addresses how the vendor’s solution will not only accomplish the future state but exceed even the loftiest of future state aspirations.

The rest of the proposal should use the executive summary as a jumping off point for explaining how the vendor’s solution will be the best choice, all the while erring on the side of brevity and responsiveness with the supplemental strategies needed to win the deal.


Hope Sutton, Marketing Communication Coordinator at Alera Group

Excellent RFPs are driven by personalization. From the cover page to the content inside, the entire RFP needs to be prospect/client centric. Going the extra mile to show the company that you are tailoring your approach to their needs is a must in today’s competitive market.


David Rynne, Presales Global Content Specialist at Basware

A well-executed executive summary is like a good subject headline. Your executive summary must be personalized for your buyer personas with solutions to their unique challenges, or else it doesn’t give the prospect a reason to read further.

The executive summary is there to position your company as a problem solver that offers multiple benefits and value. The rest of the RFP is structured the same—and reiterates the bullet points of the executive summary, but in more detail.


Erica Taylor, Co-Founding Partner at TINSEL Experiential Design

  • Provide a working project timeline to the clients, which demonstrates the feasibility of your team’s involvement and insight into your team’s process, systems, and action steps.
  • Re-articulate KPIs and success metrics—if applicable, include other measurable data points that might be valuable and prove the ROI of the project.
  • Whether it’s requested or not, share other projects and case studies with proof points that share the same aesthetic style or scope. This helps clients feel secure in the fact that you have the experience and expertise needed to get the job done.
  • Include a section to reflect open questions, which demonstrates that you are thinking deeply and analytically about the project proposed in the RFP.

Tyler Sweatt, Managing Partner at Future Tense

Context and clarity will set your RFP responses apart. Too many organizations respond to RFPs with canned marketing language and limited substance, making evaluation and differentiation extremely difficult.

Contextualize your response to the actual challenges the organization you’re responding to is facing. Show them you understand how your solution must fit into their environment. Make it clear that your solution or approach is credible and relevant through cases studies or supporting data.


Frank Oelschlager, Partner/Managing Director at Ten Mile Square Technologies

To make an RFP response truly stand out, it must not only meet the bar for completeness, content quality, and qualifications—it must also provide detail into both “the what” and “the how.”

The best way to offer this detail is by directly connecting the proposed solution to the various parts of the problem statement and requirements laid out in the RFP. Create a narrative that allows the buyer to visualize their success as a result of your partnership.


Greg Githens, Author at Catalyst & Cadre

The strategic thinking micro skill of empathy is critical to a good response. Make your potential client the hero of the story. Show that you have an adequate understanding of the client and their business environment. Imagine the RFP issuer reading your proposal with a compliance matrix next to them, where they first evaluate whether you understand their needs then how well your offer fits.


Walter Wise, CEO at The BPI Strategy Group

Respond to every requirement, providing the exact information requested, using the format that was requested. Write in layman’s terms, typically 10th to 11th grade level, as that is easy to understand by the evaluators. I don’t use fancy covers, but I do use Johnson Boxes and specific proposal graphics when practical.


Ingrid Christensen, President at INGCO International

  • Give yourself enough time. It usually takes double the amount of time to prepare a quality response than you estimated.
  • Research who is on the decision-making panel and figure out their pain points. Customize your proposal to hit all the details requested in the RFP and tailor your communication to address all pain points.
  • Take time to read, reread, and reread again. Make sure you have several team members review the entire document.
  • Deliver at least a day early. You don’t want all of your hard work to go down the drain because your RFP didn’t arrive on time.

Rafe Gomez, Co-owner at VC Inc. Marketing

Don’t feature verbose, unnecessary, or extraneous components that make absolutely no sense from a selling perspective. You don’t need to tell the whole story—just tell enough to hook your prospect. By describing the exclusive benefits your organization can deliver as quickly, concisely, and convincingly as possible…you’ll have greater potential to win the deal.


You Might Like: 10 RFP Issuers Reveal What They’re Looking for in an RFP Response

Diane Callihan, President at Callihan Content Creation

I always feel a bit sorry for the person who has to wade through a number of RFP responses, because they are typically so dry and boring. To stand out, I make my RFP responses fun to read—not being afraid to include some personality, attitude, and humor. My agency was awarded a large project, and the client said it had a lot to do with the fact that my proposal made them laugh.


Joe Marchelewski, Sr. Account Manager at Juris Productions PR

Being meticulous with the response is absolutely necessary. Do your homework on the company. What exactly are they asking? Who has represented them in the past? What kinds of clues can you find from their prior representation? RFP responses need context. Context only comes from understanding…which only comes from research.


Ken Gaul, Director at Source One

Understand that there is a certain amount of “checking the box” that needs to be done. Answer the face value question concisely, then springboard into your solution to the question(s) behind the question. Beyond what your prospective customer is asking you for, what should they be thinking about?

To rise to the top of the scorecard, you need to be competitively priced but you also need the prospect to feel that you understand their challenges innately, and that you can guide them to the ideal solution. The premise is that your solution is the ideal one, and they just don’t know it yet.

This is, of course, assuming that you’ve already done your due diligence and qualified the opportunity. Is the person running the RFP going to properly represent your solution to the true decision makers? If not, maybe pass on it. Your time is better spent on prospects with whom you can develop a relationship.


Tamara Van Meter, Firm Principal and Head of Interior Design at SMBW

  • Follow their lead. Use the client’s RFP format, including the order and terminology, to make it easy for them to read and evaluate.
  • Incorporate performance results from past projects to demonstrate the value you bring to the table.
  • Avoid oversaturating each page with text. A good practice with proposal formatting is to use photographs or graphics with no more than three supporting points for a clear and succinct message.

Lisa Rehurek, Founder and CEO at The RFP Success™ Company

Give prompts to your technical writers for each question. Make it easy for them to give you what you need, and help them in the process. Prompt them with how to answer the question with more detailed questions, or provide them with a table that outlines exactly what information you want them to provide. This keeps them focused, it gives you more consistency across multiple technical writers, and it makes the process simpler on them.


Looking for ways to improve team collaboration for stronger RFP responses? Start using Responsive to craft winning content with your team.

Healthcare RFPs: Build trust through authentic storytelling

Healthcare RFPs: Build trust through authentic storytelling

“96% of top-performing marketers agree their organizations have built credibility and trust with their audience.” So, why should healthcare RFPs be any different?

A written document like a request for proposal may not appear to have the same pizzazz. However, an RFP response holds just as many creative possibilities as other types of content you produce. Additionally, healthcare RFPs are a revenue-generating opportunity with the potential to make a positive impact.

Healthcare continues to evolve rapidly while newer, more advanced organizations rise up to take hold of the industry. With that acceleration and competition, there is more pressure for your marketing team to perform.

RFP responses provide an opportunity to stand out in your evolving, competitive industry. With a focus on authentic storytelling in your healthcare RFPs, you’ll build more trust and increase your win potential.

“When you’re in the healthcare industry, you’ll be competing against other firms that have a lot of the same experience and knowledge that you have. You can all do the job and meet the requirements of the RFP. But how are you going to really stand out? One word: Trust.” – Lisa Rehurek,  Founder of The RFP Success™ Company

Healthcare marketing complexity with content creation

Healthcare marketers experience similar challenges to peers in other industries. The major difference is an added layer of complexity, thanks to strict compliance and heavy regulations. This has a direct impact on the content you create, including RFP responses.

Marketing Manager of TheraSpecs, Greg Bullock said his top content challenges are:

1. Communicating medical information in an authoritative way…with a user-friendly approach.

Medical content can be cumbersome, confusing and ultimately frustrating for the end user, which requires brands to communicate information in an approachable way. If you simplify too much, you lose the authority and expertise that is critical to establishing a strong reputation.

2. Keeping information medically up-to-date and accurate.

Generally, it is always a challenge to regularly update content and ensure that the information is still accurate. However, healthcare organizations have particularly unique issues given the wealth of new medical studies and anecdotal expertise that emerges regularly.

When responding to RFPs, you likely see similar content challenges arise. You need to make sure content is current and correct. You must strike the right balance between competence and conversation. You need to have branding that is clear and consistent.

Hit all of these marks and you are on your way to demonstrating why you are the partner they can trust. 95% say that if they trust a company, they’re more likely to be loyal patrons.

Building trust and credibility in healthcare RFPs

“When you’re in a highly technical industry like healthcare, there’s more to what you can bring to the table than just the specifications and requirements of the RFP. Healthcare companies and entities are under a lot of stress to keep up with regulations, compliance issues, stakeholder involvement, political ramifications, the list goes on.”

Lisa Rehurek, founder of The RFP Success™ Company and host of The RFP Success Show, has experienced the complexities of healthcare RFPs firsthand. She has long been a champion of responding to RFPs. Lisa continually encourages any organization bidding on RFPs to excel at building trust over and above their competitors.

“Yes, they’re looking for specific knowledge and expertise, but they also want a lifeline. Weaving in stories, writing in a more conversational tone, being authentic in your response to really get to the emotion of it, will help them visualize that you will be that lifeline. And with that, they can exhale. Trust is built.”

RFPs in healthcare: Bring your authentic voice forward

As a marketer, you’re creative by nature. If you look at your other marketing campaigns, you unearthed stories to communicate more authentically with your audience. You can achieve the same with your RFP content.

Ready to bring your brand’s authentic voice forward? Give these RFP components your full attention to build trust with your prospect and make their buying decision easier.

  • Cover Letter – Reveal key benefits they will experience while working with you and show your excitement for this future partnership. Use the client and company name often to personalize.
  • Executive Summary – Hook them with an opening statement about your solutions and explore the backstory of your company: mission, history, and purpose. (Once again, use the client and company name often.)
  • Our Approach – Explain your methodology and how your solution benefits your customers. Include relevant customer stories or testimonials for validation, focusing on the process and results.
  • Competitive Differentiators – Call out why they should work with you instead of one of your competitors, using comparison data and visual aids. It’s not a time to bad-mouth your competitor—just show you are the best choice.
  • Support / Customer Service – Highlight customer support offerings (help center, ongoing training, or educational webinars, etc). Insert customer story or testimonial that talks about their experience working with your team.
  • Brand Consistency – Not a section per se…brand consistency must be strong throughout. From messaging to design language, “on brand” content helps you earn trust.

Working in healthcare marketing is not a pass to create content without a pulse. Yes, you need to meet specifications and requirements. And sometimes, messaging might seem a little flat compared to more provocative industries.

At the end of the day, the goal is to show the human side of your brand and build a high level of trust with your prospect. Challenge yourself to make your healthcare RFPs better—more relatable, more relevant. Every RFP response is your chance to have a genuine conversation and to tell a story.

A response management platform ensures you have your best storytelling moments readily available. Schedule a demo of RFPIO to make a bigger impact on your next healthcare RFP.

Make your healthcare RFPs stand out with proposal graphics

Make your healthcare RFPs stand out with proposal graphics

$280.25 billion. That’s the dollar amount the health technology sector is expected to reach by 2021. In the 2019 Global Healthcare Outlook report, Deloitte revealed parallels between the decline of healthcare profits and the rise of new organizations redefining fundamental aspects of the health care industry.

Healthcare organizations are reacting to these industry shifts, searching for ways to optimize their financial and operational performance. As a proposal manager working in this rapidly evolving industry, your role has become increasingly important. Responding to healthcare RFPs is your primary job function and successful outcomes fall right on top of your shoulders.

Now is the time to level up your healthcare RFP game. Using proposal graphics is one of the most effective ways to stand out and one-up your competition.

RFPs in healthcare don’t have to be boring

“I’m a proposal manager at a healthcare organization. How am I supposed to jazz things up when I’m responding to RFPs exactly?”

That’s a fair statement. RFPs? Not the most exciting content. Healthcare? Not the most exciting industry. Which is precisely why infusing your healthcare RFPs with visuals gives you an edge.

Unlike hi-tech companies, healthcare hasn’t been fully revolutionized by technology…yet. Proposal graphics are a great way to stay ahead of the curve in your industry. On top of that, using visuals is actually a game-changing strategy in proposal management as a whole.

Bringing design elements into proposals is a much less mature practice. It’s crazy to think about, considering that marketing has been using visuals for the better part of a decade to enhance communication efforts and user experience.

In recent years, visuals have started to creep into proposals across industries. Healthcare RFPs can especially benefit from graphics as a way to break up long narratives, make content more dynamic, and engage prospects.

“Graphics really help! We understand there is a lot of information to report, but long narratives can be cumbersome and make the RFP response feel daunting. RFPs that convey information in a creative way are more dynamic, and therefore, the reader is more engaged in the actual content.” – Caitlyn Helsen, RFP Issuer

Finding success with proposal graphics

In a recent RFPIO webinar, Picture Perfect: Turn Words Into Graphics That Win RFPs, Mike Parkinson from renowned proposal creative services firm 24 Hour Company brought many useful proposal graphics tips to the table.

A few of those takeaways are below, but you can watch Mike’s entire webinar on our YouTube channel

Be clear

Does the confused mind say yes or no? The goal of your sales proposal is to paint a clear picture of why their team should choose to work with your team. Using visuals in your healthcare RFPs is a huge differentiator…as long as you’re communicating clearly. Choose your design elements wisely—when in doubt, simple is usually better.

Be strategic

Select graphics and design elements that help you tell the most compelling story. Rather than burying stats and data within a paragraph, create a graph or chart. Rather than using bullet points and numbered lists to show steps in a process, build a ladder or stairs diagram.

healthcare rfps graphics
Source: PresentationGo

Be scrappy

You don’t have to be a designer with a Photoshop certification to pull off proposal graphics. Even if you have a design team in-house, you may not be able to use them as a resource. There is a world of reasonable (and free) graphics solutions out there for you, from Canva to PowerPoint. Embrace a DIY design spirit and see what happens.

Simplifying proposal graphics in healthcare RFPs

Now that you have proposal graphics figured out, you need an easy way to include them in your healthcare RFP responses. Due to formatting limitations, trying to insert imagery manually can quickly become a roadblock. A response management platform like RFPIO simplifies the proposal graphics process.

RFP software makes it easy to repurpose proposal graphics, so you don’t have to reinvent the wheel every time an RFP lands in your inbox. You can create a set of graphics by catalog, by product, by action, or by value. Once these graphics are uploaded in your Content Library as a Q&A pair, you can continually recycle them.

Since you already spent time creating proposal graphics AND RFP responses, you want the formatting to be as stress-free as possible. The alternative is a lot of manual effort, where you’re recreating graphics in PowerPoint or hunting down previous versions in Google Drive folders. RFPIO is flexible, allowing you to insert images into various types of responses with a quick search and a few clicks.

You have the technologies and resources to create customized visuals for your healthcare RFPs. It’s pretty easy to do simple designs in a scalable way, without investing a lot of expertise, time, and money. Proposal graphics will become your secret weapon, one of the most powerful ways to differentiate yourself from your competition.

RFPIO makes proposal graphics easy to include in your next healthcare RFP. Give it a try.

See how it feels to respond with confidence

Why do 250,000+ users streamline their response process with RFPIO? Schedule a demo to find out.