Wrapping your head around terminology

Mirroring the terminology of tender requests in your answers is critical to creating an easy reading experience for the buyer.

Do you say Tom-ay-toe or Tom-ah-toe? Dance or Dahnce? Rockmelon or Cantaloupe? (That’s one for the eastern stater’s ). 

We’ve all had this debate, and although often heated, it usually ends with everyone involved agreeing it all means the same thing anyway. 

This is not the case in tenders. Mirroring the terminology of tender request documents in your answers is critical to creating an easy reading experience for the buyer. 

If the request documents refer to you exclusively as the ‘Supplier’ do not start calling yourself the ‘Contractor’ in your responses. Why? Because that’s not what your potential client has called you, and what they say (in this instance) goes. 

Keep an eye out for these describing words for you and your client in the tender request: 

Buyer > Seller 

Principal > Contractor 

Company > Supplier 

Procurer > Tenderer 

Always use the terminology they select, this way you will avoid confusion and create a sense of familiarity for the reader. 

Happy bidding! 

P.S. It’s tom-ah-toe, dance, and cantaloupe. 


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