Preparing the Perfect Tender – Part I – Presentation

How you resource and prepare your tender response is a crucial factor in presenting a winning tender. Once your company is in receipt of the tender documentation it must put into effect a dedicated tender strategy.

On receipt of the document start a timescale diary. Log the receipt date and the due date for return of the document. Based on these dates and any other date stated for a pre-tender meeting, set out your timetable for the stages of your response and appoint a tender manager with the authority to conscript assistance from other expertise with your company.

General Principles

The following general principles are suggested while preparing a tender response:

Presentation

It is important to ensure your tender response is clearly and precisely displayed.

Avoid handwritten presentations, even the nearest writer trends to lose clarity after a time.

Use a type size one point larger than the issuing authority’s document if possible. This displays your response clearly.

Normally correction made by the use of correction fluid (white fluid) are not acceptable to most of the organizations. Hence, tenderes should sign with date and stamp, all corrections and overwriting.

All signatures in tender document should be dated as well as the pages of all sections of tender document should be signed at the lower right hand corner whenever required in the tender paper by the tenderer or by a person holding power of attorney authorizing him to sign on behalf of the tenderer before submission of tender.

Prepare covers and covering letters depending on tender system and requirement of the tender. Make sure that you have enclosed right documents in right cover.

Six Tips To Present Your Visiting Card In A Professional Way

Is there a preferred way of handing out a visiting card? What impression do you create in your customer’s mind while you hand over your visiting card? Read on to find the answers.

Your objective in handing out your card:

If you are making a sales visit, your objective is more than just introducing yourself with your visiting card. Your objective is to accord enough value to your card, that your prospect finds it worthy enough to be filed in his rolodex. He should see your name in his choice set, every time he considers using a service offered by you.

It is essential to follow a certain simple rules to achieve that objective. Here are the 6 rules:

1. Your visiting card is YOU:

Your visiting card represents you. This is not just because it bears your name, designation and your organization details but because it represents far more than the material written on the card. Your prospect will treat you with the same respect that you treat your visiting card. Take a moment to reflect how you handover your card now.

2. Invest in a good quality visiting card holder:

If your card is crumpled, it reflects as a poor self identity. A crisp card taken out of a professional looking card holder leaves a good first impression. It tells your prospect that you deserve to be treated with the same respect. So, invest some money to get yourself a good quality visiting card holder. Make it a habit to pull out your card only from that case.

3. Keep it readily accessible:

Searching for your visiting card reflects poorly on your organizing skills. Allocate a certain place where you keep your visiting cards, and you should be able to access it in less than 2 seconds. The time you are with your prospect is valuable. Do not waste it in searching for your card.

4. Present it with your name facing the customer:

Your customer should be able to read the material written on the visiting card. Do not cover any portion of your card with your fingers. Hold the card on its sides and present with your name facing the customer.

5. Stand up while extending your card:

This gesture tells that you accord value to your card. This also increases the chance of your card being read and later being filed in your prospect’s rolodex.

6. Give a ten seconds introduction of the service you provide:

Very few prospects actually read what is written on your card. So, it is always a good idea to tell them about how you can add value to your prospect with your service. Read our blog on how to create a 2 minute pitch to introduce your service effectively. This pitch comes in handy to make a quick presentation with just your card as a visual aid.

Follow these simple rules and see a visible difference in the way you are treated by your prospects. They will listen with far more interest to the presentation that you make later.

Don’t Be Fooled by These Presentation Myths

Are your business presentations persuasive? Does your audience remember and act on your message? If not, perhaps you are following conventional wisdom. The problem with conventional wisdom is it’s often irrelevant, out of date, or just plain wrong.

Here are some widely held presentation myths that you would do well to ignore.

Tell ‘em three times. There is an old saw for presenters that says you should first tell your audience what you’re going to tell ‘em, then tell ‘em, then tell ‘em what you told ‘em. This might have worked in our great grandfathers’ time, when people were less educated and had longer attention spans. If you tell a modern audience the same thing three times they will feel insulted. Don’t treat your audience like children.

If you feel your message is so complicated that you need to repeat yourself, you need to simplify your message instead.

You need a rich, resonant voice. This is true only if you are a radio personality. A good business presenter has a voice with three qualities:

It is loud enough to be heard. If your voice isn’t loud enough, use a microphone.

It is clear enough to be understood. This is not a problem for most people (see articulation, below).

It is enthusiastic enough to be compelling. A monotone is boring. Enthusiasm is contagious. If you don’t sound excited about your message, why should your audience care about it?

Provided you are loud enough, clear enough, and enthusiastic, your natural voice is probably just fine.

You must articulate clearly. It’s OK if you slur some words together or drop a letter here and there, so long as your audience understands you. Don’t try to sound like a radio announcer speaking the Queen’s English if you have a certain accent. Be yourself. Your audience wants to connect with you as an individual. They know a phony when they hear one.

Moreover, you don’t want to sound like everyone else has been taught to sound. If you sound like the crowd you will be perceived as a commodity. You want to sound like yourself – unique.

You need more polish. A business audience is skeptical, critical, and hard-nosed. They have strong opinions and are not easily sold. Making better eye contact and smoother gestures will not make much difference to them if they don’t like your message.

Gestures, body language, and other niceties of delivery style are like polish. Polish can add a bit more shine to something that is already shiny, but it cannot bring luster to something that is inherently dull. A discriminating audience is looking for content, not a slick delivery.

You need great visual aids. Most presenters use slides and other visual aids as a crutch. They show a slide and read what’s on it. Your audience could just read the slides themselves, making you redundant.

In many cases you may not need visual aids at all. The most compelling visuals are the mental images you evoke in the minds of your listeners through metaphors, examples, and stories.

Your audience is interested in your message. Most presenters assume their audience is enriched by their presentation. This is a dangerous assumption to make. Chances are some (if not most) of the people listening to you are only there because they have to be. They may not agree with you, they may not want to hear you, and they have other things on their mind. They are doing you a favor by giving you some of their valuable time and possibly some of their limited attention. You need to give them something they value in return. And you need to let them know you are offering value from the very beginning, or you will quickly lose them.

Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse. You don’t have to practice very much. This is a business presentation, not a soliloquy from Shakespeare. You won’t be perfect, and you don’t need to be. You just need to master the material.

Mastering the material means being able to discuss it comfortably and convincingly. Your audience expects you to be in command of the subject matter you are presenting. This does not mean memorizing.

Having said that, you should memorize your opening because it must grab the attention of your audience. You should also memorize the call to action in your conclusion, because it is too important to ad lib. In between your memorized opening and closing lines is the meat of your presentation. Work from a carefully structured outline, but be flexible.

Most presenters buy these myths. They try to look, sound, and present like other good presenters. They strive to be plain vanilla. Vanilla is popular. Vanilla is safe. But it isn’t memorable. If your message isn’t memorable, your presentation has failed.