Understanding how government bids are structured is the first step to winning contracts. This guide explains mandatory requirements, technical merit, and how AI tools like Narwin can help you stay compliant and competitive.
Landing a government contract in Canada isn’t just about having the right product or service — it’s about knowing how to speak the language of procurement. Federal opportunities, especially those listed on Buyandsell.gc.ca, are governed by strict structures that require precision, compliance, and strategy. This guide breaks down the essential anatomy of a successful bid — from understanding mandatory requirements to showcasing your technical merit.
1. Understanding the Procurement Blueprint
Every federal solicitation follows a structure outlined by Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC). Most competitive bids are evaluated based on:
- Mandatory Criteria
- Point-Rated Criteria
- Financial Proposal
Each element plays a distinct role. Failing to meet any one mandatory requirement — even something as small as using the wrong font size — can disqualify your proposal outright.

2. Mandatory Criteria: The Non-Negotiables
These are the foundational elements of a government bid. They often include:
- Specific certifications (e.g. Controlled Goods, ISO, security clearances)
- Financial statements
- Insurance coverage levels
- Proof of past performance
- Signed declarations and compliance forms
These criteria are binary — you either meet them, or your proposal is deemed non-compliant.
📌 Tip: Use a “Shred to Comply” checklist approach — as PSPC recommends — to ensure every compliance box is ticked before writing a single word of your proposal.

3. Technical Merit: Where You Differentiate
Once you’ve passed the mandatory gate, your proposal is evaluated for its technical strength. Here, evaluators look at:
- Methodology and approach
- Team qualifications
- Innovation and added value
- Project understanding
- Schedule and resource management
The key is to answer exactly what the Statement of Work (SOW) asks — no more, no less. Don’t use generic boilerplate responses. Government evaluators are trained to spot filler text, and vague language often leads to lower scores.

4. Financial Evaluation: Lowest Bid Isn’t Always Best
Price is usually evaluated after technical scoring. In some procurements, the lowest compliant bidder wins (e.g., Standing Offers or Supply Arrangements). In others, the contract is awarded based on a Best Value approach — balancing technical score and price.
Read the Basis of Selection section carefully — it tells you exactly how the contract will be awarded.

5. Using Narwin to Your Advantage
If this process sounds complex — that’s because it is. That’s why smart vendors are turning to tools like Narwin to navigate government bids with greater confidence and fewer errors.
Narwin helps you:
- Parse solicitation documents to extract requirements automatically
- Compare mandatory and technical criteria against your company’s qualifications
- Generate tailored proposal content using your past RFPs, case studies, and credentials
- Stay compliant with formatting, security standards, and submission protocols
It’s especially useful for organizations bidding repeatedly — Narwin “remembers” your past bids and learns to maintain your voice and structure while increasing compliance over time.

Final Thoughts: Precision Is Power
In the world of federal procurement, success doesn’t go to the flashiest bidder — it goes to the most prepared one. Understand the structure. Respect the criteria. Deliver on technical merit. And if you can leverage automation and AI to tighten your process, even better.
Because in the race to win public contracts, missing a comma can cost you millions.
