Request for proposal explained

A request for proposal (RFP) is a form of reverse auction that solicits a business proposal by an organisation interested in the procurement of a service or product from potential suppliers.[1] It is usually part of a complex sales process, and made through a bidding process.

Unlike invitations to tender, which award contracts based upon the price and quality of the tender, RFPs allow suppliers more flexibility in proposing an original service or product in alignment with a company's needs.

Similar requests include a request for quotation (RFQ) and a request for information (RFI), where a customer needs more information from vendors before submitting an RFP. An RFI is typically followed by an RFP or RFQ.[2] When an RFP is made after negotiations with prospective contractors, the submitted tender is known as a BAFO (best and final offer).

Components

A request for proposal requires the bidder to produce an original business proposal based on the buyer's needs. Depending on the RFP document's specification, a bidder may be required to decide upon project expectations, timetable, product design, and vendors. Other requested information may include basic corporate information and history, technical capability, product information.

Role in government procurement

See main article: Government procurement. In United States government procurement, Federal Acquisition Regulation 15.203 covers requests for proposals, stating The FAR allows for evaluation of proposals, further discussions with bidders and invitation for submission of written final proposal revisions (FPRs), upon which a final selection decision is based.[3] Federal government requests for final proposal revisions must

The term "request for proposals" is sometimes used in relation to government procurement in the United Kingdom, for example a request for proposals to raise and manage the UK Government's proposed Broadband Investment Fund was issued in June 2016.[4]

Other requests

The collective term RFX is often used to embrace a request for proposal (RFP), or any of the terms listed below.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: . . The Elements of Technical Writing. 100. New York. Macmillan Publishers. 1993. 0020130856.
  2. Web site: What's the difference between an RFI, an RFP, and an RFQ?. Humboldt State University. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150721145920/http://www2.humboldt.edu/its/node/1633. 2015-07-21. 2015-07-28.
  3. [Government Accountability Office]
  4. [Infrastructure and Projects Authority]
  5. James, M., Definition: RFx, TechTarget, updated May 2017, accessed 23 February 2023
  6. Web site: Tonti. Jon. Out with Request for Proposals and in With Request for Solutions. Nearshore Americas. 11 April 2017. July 3, 2012.