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When you’re under the pump with a short submission timeframe, your best default strategy for getting a top-notch bid out the door in good time is to “go with the current” in terms of people’s natural talents, advises Jordan Kelly, bid strategist and coach. |
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Kelly says people can be coached in their areas of weakness to a reasonable degree but rarely will they be great in those particular aspects of bid production: people generally gravitate back to the aspects in which they naturally excel and endeavour to avoid those in which they don’t. |
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The first step is to accurately identify the priority skills required for each part of the submission and the process, giving careful consideration to which individuals possess these. |
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Really think about each person and who (rather than what) they are; “day job” position titles can be misleading in the context of a bid, Kelly warns. She says that often, the strengths and weaknesses you’d assume of an individual in a particular role just don’t import across into a bid team environment in the way you’d expect them to. |
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