The RFP response process: a step-by-step guide
An RFP (request for proposal) response is a structured reply to a buyer's formal request that shows how your product meets their requirements, terms, and pricing. A repeatable process, from a clear bid or no-bid decision through drafting against a content library to a reviewed, on-time submission, lets a small team win more bids without adding headcount.
What an RFP is (and RFI, RFQ)
An RFP asks vendors to propose how they would meet a defined set of requirements, usually with pricing and terms. It is often preceded by an RFI (request for information), which gathers high-level options before a buyer knows exactly what they want, and may be followed or replaced by an RFQ (request for quotation), which is mostly about price for a well-defined scope.
The RFP response process, step by step
- 1Qualify the opportunity with a bid / no-bid decision: is it winnable and worth the effort?
- 2Assign an owner and pull in the subject-matter experts you will need.
- 3Build a compliance matrix: every requirement mapped to who answers it and where.
- 4Draft answers from your content library rather than starting from a blank page.
- 5Add win themes and differentiators that connect your answers to the buyer's priorities.
- 6Review in passes: technical accuracy, legal and security, then pricing and final polish.
- 7Format to the buyer's template and submit before the deadline, with margin to spare.
- 8Capture the newly written answers back into your content library for next time.
- 9Debrief on wins and losses to improve both the content and the process.
Build a content library (your biggest lever)
The single biggest accelerator is a maintained library of approved answers. It turns most of an RFP into reuse-and-tailor instead of write-from-scratch, keeps your claims consistent across bids, and shortens review because the content is already vetted. The library is only useful if it stays current, so make updating it part of every submission, not a someday project.
Roles in an RFP response
- Proposal / bid manager: owns the timeline, the matrix, and the final document.
- Subject-matter experts: provide and validate technical, security, and product answers.
- Sales / account owner: supplies deal context and win themes.
- Legal and security: review terms, claims, and risk.
- Executive sponsor: signs off on pricing and commitments.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Skipping the compliance matrix and then missing a mandatory requirement.
- Generic answers that do not address the buyer's specific priorities.
- A last-minute scramble because qualification and planning were rushed.
- No content library, so every bid reinvents the same answers.
- Inconsistent or unverified claims that surface later in security review.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between an RFP, RFI, and RFQ?
An RFI (request for information) gathers high-level options early. An RFP (request for proposal) asks vendors to propose how they would meet defined requirements, usually with pricing and terms. An RFQ (request for quotation) focuses on price for a well-defined scope. Many purchases use more than one in sequence.
How long does an RFP response take?
It varies with complexity, from a few days to several weeks. The biggest factor is whether you start from a maintained content library or a blank page. Reusing vetted answers and a clear compliance matrix can cut the effort by more than half compared with writing each response from scratch.
What is a bid/no-bid decision?
A bid/no-bid decision is the qualification step where you decide whether to respond to an RFP at all, based on how winnable it is, how well it fits, and the effort required. Disciplined bid/no-bid decisions concentrate your team on the opportunities you can actually win.
Do this in a fraction of the time
Diligio centralises your approved answers, drafts each response grounded in your sources, and independently verifies it before you review. RFPs, DDQs, and security questionnaires, answered from one knowledge base.