RFP proposal

What Is a Request for Proposal (RFP)? A Complete Business Guide

The RFP Isn’t Just a Document — It’s the Opening Move in a High-Stakes Game​
In 2016, I was part of a team responding to an RFP from a Fortune 500 company.

  • 200 pages.
  • 3 weeks.
  • 6 competing vendors.

  • One winner.
    We didn’t have the best price. We didn’t have the largest team.
    An RFP isn’t a test of compliance. It’s a test of alignment.

The Truth About RFPs

If you’ve never worked in pre-sales, the term RFP (Request for Proposal) sounds… bureaucratic. Like some dusty PDF only lawyers enjoy.In reality, an RFP is a battlefield — just politely disguised in corporate formatting.

  • Official Definition: A formal document issued by a buyer to solicit proposals from potential vendors for a specific project or service.
  • Real Definition: The buyer’s way of saying:“We have a problem. We want to see who understands it best — and who we can trust to solve it.”

Most people think RFPs are about answering questions. They’re not.They’re about showing that your thinking, approach, and values match the client’s needs — sometimes even before the client knows exactly what those needs are.

What’s Inside an RFP(Request for Proposal)

Every RFP is different, but they tend to follow a familiar skeleton.

Typical Sections in an RFP:

  • Background & Objectives – The client’s world, their problem, and the goals of the project.
  • Scope of Work – What’s in, what’s out, and the boundaries of the engagement.
  • Requirements – Functional, technical, and sometimes even cultural asks.
  • Evaluation Criteria – How they’ll score you. (Pro tip: Read this section twice. Then build your response backward from it.)
  • Submission Guidelines & Deadlines – Formats, rules, timelines.
  • Commercial / Pricing Template – Where you put your numbers (and hope they don’t just sort responses by lowest bid).

Requirements: The Heart of the RFP

The requirements section is where many vendors lose the game.
Why? Because they treat it like a checklist.
The best responses read between the lines.

Example:
Requirement says: “Vendor should have experience in healthcare ERP implementation.”
Average vendor: “Yes, we have experience.”
Great vendor: “Over the last 5 years, we have successfully implemented ERP systems for 3 major healthcare providers, resulting in 20% faster patient record retrieval and 15% lower billing errors. Here’s how we did it…”

The difference? Specificity + Outcome.

A Simple RFP Example

(Condensed for illustration)

Background:
City of Rivertown needs a new waste management software to improve route efficiency and reduce carbon emissions.

Scope:

  • Build & deploy waste tracking system
  • Integrate with existing fleet GPS
  • Provide 2 years of maintenance & support

Requirements:

  • System uptime of 99.5% or higher
  • Mobile app for drivers with offline mode
  • Dashboard for city admins with CO₂ tracking metrics
  • Data migration from legacy system

Evaluation Criteria:

  • Technical fit – 40%
  • Vendor experience – 30%
  • Pricing – 20%
  • Sustainability approach – 10%

Why This Matters in Pre-Sales

Morgan Housel says: “The trick is not to avoid risk, but to manage it intelligently.”
An RFP is the client’s way of managing risk — they’re betting on you not just to deliver a product, but to avoid failure.

If you work in pre-sales:

  • Don’t just answer the RFP.
  • Shape your response to reduce the buyer’s uncertainty.
  • Make it easy for them to picture success with you.

Closing Thoughts

An RFP is the first handshake before the deal.
Some will shake like they just woke up.
Some will squeeze too hard.
The best? They shake with confidence — and make the other person feel they’ve met the right partner

“In my upcoming post on Pre-sales vs Sales, I’ll break down how these two functions work together…”

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Win More Deals. Tell Better Stories.

Join The Deal Architect Newsletter

Join the fastest-growing pre-sales learning community

Weekly insights, playbook snippets, and tools from real pursuits — no fluff, no spam.

Pre-sales isn’t about filling RFPs. It’s about shaping the story, aligning with client intent, and building trust before the first signature.

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