Your RFP should go to no more than five vendors!
As a rule, when I send an RFP to vendors on behalf of my clients (for a new AMS, LMS, or other software product), the RFP goes out to no more than five vendors. Why only five and not 10, or 20? There are several reasons, but here are three key reasons:
- If you receive 20 replies, you'll need to review 20 proposals, which will take a lot of your time.
- The likelihood of there being 20 different products that can best meet your needs is unlikely. (I'd go so far as to say it's impossible.)
- And by extension, you'll waste a lot of your time and a lot of vendor time.
So how do you limit your list to five vendors? You call them and talk to them before you send the RFP. Very often a short phone call will help you eliminate vendors on price alone (i.e., their cost is way beyond your budget).
This rule also applies to any other RFP you're sending, by the way. If you're sending your RFP to more than five vendors, you haven't done appropriate vetting!
Pick up the phone and call the vendors before you send the RFP. You'll be happy you did.
![]()
Wes's Wednesday Wisdom Archives
Start small
Start small When I work with my clients on projects that involve measuring member engagement, […]
Some context, please
Some context, please A pet peeve of mine: A report about associations (e.g., marketing benchmarks report) where […]
Eventually automated emails get ignored
Eventually automated emails get ignored During the discovery and development phase of implementing a new […]
The challenge the AMS providers see
The challenge the AMS providers see Over the years I’ve asked AMS providers what they […]
Be careful about “solutioning” too quickly
Be careful about “solutioning” too quickly One of the great things about software developers is […]
What’s our next action?
What’s our next action? As you can imagine, I spend a lot of time in […]
Don’t automate for the sake of automation
Don’t automate for the sake of automation I’m the laziest person in the world. I […]
Don’t forget about what got better
Don’t forget about what got better Negativity bias is the tendency to focus on only […]
Give a little at a time rather than taking away
Give a little at a time rather than taking away I’m sure there’s research somewhere […]
First, you gotta have the data
First, you gotta have the data When I work with clients on a new AMS […]
