Working backwards from the scorecard: the ignored Tender strategy
Most teams write Tenders forward – starting with what they want to say. The winning teams work backwards – building every answer around the buyer’s scorecard, not their own story.
The Fatal Flaw in Most Tender Responses
Ask any seasoned evaluator, and they’ll tell you the same thing: most Tender responses are written from the inside out. Businesses start by showcasing their services, outlining credentials, listing features – and only then try to retrofit it into the buyer’s question.
It feels logical. It feels complete.
But it’s fundamentally backwards.
Because Tenders aren’t about you. They’re about what the buyer needs to evaluate.
Why the Scorecard Should Be Your Starting Point
Every Tender evaluation panel has one thing in common: a scoring matrix. It might be spelled out in the documents or kept behind closed doors, but either way, your bid is being measured against a fixed set of criteria.
If your response doesn’t map clearly to that scorecard – in structure, content, and emphasis – you’re asking the evaluator to work harder than they should.
And when scoring gets competitive, even great content can lose points if it’s misaligned, buried, or off-brief.
The Strategic Shift: Write to Be Scored, Not Just Read
Here’s what high-performing bid teams do differently:
- They build a response map before a single word is written. Each section is pre-linked to a scoring criterion.
- They mirror the buyer’s language – using the same terms that appear in the brief and scorecard to make alignment unmistakable.
- They front-load evidence in high-weighted sections, knowing that a 40% response deserves 40% of your thinking time.
- They repeat strategically, reinforcing key proof points across sections to increase recall and relevance.
In short: they don’t just answer the question – they answer it in the way it’s meant to be scored.
This Is Where Good Responses Fall Short
It’s not that most responses are wrong. It’s that they’re not scorable. They’re long, well-meaning narratives that bury the strengths evaluators are looking for under paragraphs of context.
Ask yourself:
- Have you ever written a section and then checked the weighting?
- Have you ever answered a multi-part question without signposting each part clearly?
- Have you ever assumed that a capability you described elsewhere was “understood” across the whole document?
These habits aren’t just risky – they’re point-losers.
What We Do Differently at ProposalPro
At ProposalPro, we start with the scorecard. Always.
Before we write, we dissect every criterion, break down the weightings, and reverse-engineer the optimal structure. Then we layer in strategy, storytelling, and compliance – knowing that the best responses are easy to score and hard to forget.
It’s not just about being eligible. It’s about being irresistible.
Stop Writing Forward – Start Working Backwards
You don’t get points for everything you do.
You only get points for what the buyer asks for – and how clearly you give it to them.
If your team is still writing Tenders like marketing brochures, it’s time to flip the model.
Work backwards from the scorecard. Build from the buyer’s mindset. Win before they even tally the scores.
🟠 ProposalPro helps you respond like a strategist, not a supplier.
Let’s rebuild your next Tender from the page that actually counts: the one where they decide who wins.
Find out more about ProposalPro>>
▪ Services
▪ Meet The Team
Keep an eye on ProposalPro Insights and follow us on LinkedIn for more great advice on winning Grants, Tenders and bids.
Learn More About Tenders >>

Your executive summary is the most important part of your bid. But are you getting it right?
Experts agree that executive summaries are the most important part of your bid. They’re the most widely read, and offer you a opportunity to showcase your unique value proposition; convince the Tender evaluator(s) to recommend you; and make it easier for them to justify that decision.
And yet, so many executive summaries are haphazardly thrown together at the end of a bidding process.
Here’s how to do better, avoid common preventable mistakes, and write an executive summary that gets results.

Top 5 Tips for Better Tendering
Tendering (when done well) is a cornerstone of business growth; it’s not something that should be taken lightly. Learn how to reduce Tendering headaches with ProposalPro!

To bid or not to bid? Bid Decisionmaking
Not every opportunity is right for your business. Learn about the 3-step process that can be applied to assist with your bid decisionmaking.

Working with weighted criteria
Business owners often express confusion about working with average weighted criteria – it’s not a framework that you’ll come across too often outside of Tendering. But it can tell you a surprising amount about what’s important to the buyer, how to read between the lines and structure your Tender response to maximise your chances of success, and even whether it’s worth putting together a bid in the first place…