In the current economic climate, competition for new business is intense and even the most successful companies don’t win every contract they bid for. Having the right expectations about your win-loss ratio is important.
Although winning all of the contracts you bid for sounds ideal in practice, it would mean that you were either:
If you only bid for contracts you’re certain of winning, you are likely to limit your bid costs, but will constrict your revenue too. For example, if there were 100 contracts, each worth £50k and you limited yourself to the 10 you were nearly certain to win, you would grow your revenues by £500k. But if you bid for a further 20 contracts that you had a fair chance of winning, even with an expected win-loss ratio of 30%, you would have a further 6 wins and an extra £300k of revenue.
So the question is “what is the right win-loss ratio?”
Although the answer depends on a number of factors (e.g. number of potential suppliers, market maturity etc), literature on the subject suggests a good win rate is 40%.
One of the big four consulting firms found the single best predictor of proposal success was the existence of a strong customer relationship. If they had a strong customer relationship, the win-loss ratio was 40% and if there was no relationship with the customer, the win ratio was less than 10% (Tom Sant (2004) in “Persuasive Business Proposals”)
Interestingly, SPI reported that a steep discounting of the bid price (by more than 30%) increases the win rate from 45% to 58%, but the discount significantly reduces both revenue and profitability.
The general lessons on win-loss ratios are:
In summary, beware of kissing all the frogs in the vain hope one will be a prince. Even in that fairy tale, the princess spoke to the frog, pre-qualified the opportunity and made her successful bid.
I hope you are finding these newsletter topics useful and interesting. If you want to explore how we can help you grow and develop your business, then please contact us.
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