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Is Your
Data Center RFP Making These Super-Common Mistakes?
Writing a request for proposal is as much an art as a science. Providing clear, unbiased
buying criteria, creating compelling reasons for vendors to bid on your data center RFP,
and ensuring you provide enough time to respond to your competition are some of the fundamental
elements technology service providers look for when deciding whether or not to bid. Here
are five of the biggest errors we’ve seen data center clients make, and ways you can
avoid them.
1. Writing Your RFP with Unfair Bias to a Single Vendor
When a technology vendor looks at an RFP it usually evaluates the opportunity cost based
on:
Can we win this business? Is it worth winning? What other business are we pursuing, and can
we bid the RFP and still win other business? Do we have an existing relationship with the
client? Does our competition have a relationship with
the client? If a vendor sees messaging in a data center
RFP which makes it seem as if the competition has already been won by another vendor, it
might choose to no-bid the business.
Though you will likely get a number of offers to write your RFP from data center service
providers, you should write the RFP in a way which is transparent and doesn’t seem as
if it favors any one managed service provider.
2. Not Giving Bidders Enough Time to Bid on the RFP
You might need delivery of services to start quickly once you have the budget to do so.
You might have been provided some direction to complete a contract quickly and get additional
managed storage or server capacity for a new project. If you want to get a reasonable number
of proposals, don’t provide a short period of time for vendors to submit their bids.
Resist the temptation to request multiple hard copies of proposals and complex packaging
of proposals in an obscure way. Electronic bids can save vendors on printing costs and
transportation costs.
3. Difficult Proposal Format Some government proposals ask vendors to provide
technical answers on their response grid where you have to restate the question they asked,
refer to technical documentation in technical manuals, and work within a complex Word template.
When you are writing your RFP, remember not only does someone have to respond to it, but
you then have to thoroughly evaluate proposals and their answers. Do everyone a favor and
make the RFP easy to answer and easy to review. IT vendors love the classic “Yes, No, Yes
with Qualification” chart for technical responses
4. Providing Legal or Financial Terms Which are Potentially Problematic
Have you ever waded through twenty pages of legalese or terms and conditions of an RFP
before you could even find out what the client wanted? Always keep in mind: as much as you
want to contract for data center services, there are many customers which need to be
served. If a potential bidder feels pursuing your business puts them into potential legal
or financial risk, they simply won’t bid.
Fixed bid contracts, unrealistic service level agreement requirements, and other high risk
clauses can make your RFP go into the recycle bin, and a vendor move on to business pursuits
which aren’t as potentially risky.
5. Make Sure the RFP Process Isn’t Just a Market Study
Like the boy who cried wolf, some organizations issue RFPs just to see what products and services
are available for future initiatives. Or after the services RFP process is over, they try
to renegotiate terms, or get vendors to jump through a lot of hoops to get your business.
Having a short list of vendors and a “bake off” of services is one thing, but don’t
make vendors go through another round of proposals as a negotiation tactic.
The data center RFP process is an opportunity for a public sector organization, company,
or non-profit association to contract with vendors in a way which provides provisions
for price, value, and levels of service that are clearly established from the outset. If
you are seeking data center services, make sure you craft an RFP which you would bid
on if you were in a vendor’s shoes.
What other data center RFP errors have you seen? Please share your thoughts in the Comments
section below.
To follow up on the tips in this article, be sure to download your free guide to Lead
Generation Best Practices for Colocation Data Centers.