Guide

Responding to a tender: a concrete example

Responding to a tender means assembling two blocks: the application (who you are, your capacities) and the bid (what you propose, at what price). Here is the usual list of documents and the structure of a winning technical memo. We do not hand out a ready-made PDF (every contract differs), but the outline below is directly reusable.

The documents to provide

  • Application letter (DC1)
  • Candidate declaration (DC2): capacities, turnover
  • Deed of commitment (ATTRI1 / DC3): your signed bid
  • Price schedule (DPGF / BPU): the detail of your prices
  • Technical memo: the document that makes the difference

Structure of a winning technical memo

SectionWhat the buyer wants to read
Understanding the needYou read the specifications and grasped the constraints
People and equipmentDedicated team, equipment, subcontracting
MethodologyHow you deliver, step by step
ScheduleDeadlines met, milestones, handling of hazards
Quality, safety, environmentYour concrete, measurable commitments

The mistakes that cost the contract

Responding at the last minute, missing a required document, copying a generic memo without quoting the specifications, or offering a price so low it becomes abnormally low. The best habit is to spot the right contracts early: exactly what the Tendveo radar does.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a free tender-response template?

No universal template: every contract has its own specifications. The technical-memo outline above is reusable and free, to be adapted to each consultation's specifications.

What is the most important document in a response?

The technical memo. Price matters, but technical value often decides, since the price criterion rarely weighs 100 %.

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Source : BOAMP/DILA · Licence Ouverte 2.0 · as of 25/06/2026