Joke Collection Website - News headlines - Have you made these important jargon clear in the bid?

Have you made these important jargon clear in the bid?

In order to help discuss problems, professionals gradually simplify some terms, which are called jargon. Every industry has its own jargon, and bidding is no exception. So, what are the common jargon in the bidding industry?

Biding: the meaning of winning the bid by encircling and intercepting means a wider and higher degree of collusive bidding.

Stop price: that is, tender control price or tender limit price.

Hidden bid: refers to "anonymous" bidding, that is, any symbol such as name, seal and logo that can be presumed to be exclusive to a bidder cannot appear in the bidding documents. The bidding documents shall be typeset in a unified format, and the font and font size shall be in strict accordance with the unified requirements of the bidding documents.

Open bidding: it is relative to hidden bidding, that is, all bidding documents can distinguish their corresponding bidders at a glance.

Bidding negotiation: for special projects that are not suitable for public bidding or invitation to bid, it should be reported to the construction administrative department of the local people's government at or above the county level or its authorized bidding office, and the bidding can be negotiated after approval. Under normal circumstances, there shall be no less than two units participating in the negotiation.

Calibration: that is, to determine the winning bidder.

Clear bid: refers to the review and liquidation of the bidder's priced bill of quantities, including the verification of calculation errors and omissions in the quotation, the analysis of unbalanced quotation, the comprehensive unit price, the charging standard, the rationality and comprehensive analysis of the quotation, etc.

Flow bid: that is, the winning bidder is not the target unit expected by the owner, which is called "flow bid".

Bidding: Reread the bidding documents such as quotation and construction period. At the bid opening meeting.

Tender: refers to the tender documents or the bid-winning documents.

Bid sealing: refers to sealing the bid documents.

Identity: Identity in bidding refers to any of the following situations:

(1) A bidder whose legal representative is the same person;

(2) affiliated enterprises that invest in shares;

(3) parent-subsidiary companies with direct management and managed relationship;

(4) subsidiaries of the same parent company.

Partial shot: refers to the owner's expectation that the winning bidder is a specific unit, which is sometimes called "rigid target" in the industry. Some owners expect the winning bidder to be any one of several units, which is "shooting".

Bidding failure: refers to bidding failure.

Sub-standard: the division of index segments.

Tender announcement: it can be understood as bidding, that is, announcing the main contents of the tender documents.

Bidding: refers to artificially setting a high threshold in pre-qualification to exclude other potential bidders and leave related households.

Tender letter and tender list: the tender letter is equivalent to the current tender letter, and the tender list is equivalent to the current tender documents.

Award: that is, the tenderer issues a letter of acceptance to the winning bidder.

Accompanying bid: refers to participating in bidding as a foil.

Bidding supervision: refers to supervising the process of bid opening. Although there are supervision department personnel present during bid evaluation, this process is generally not called "bidding supervision".

Bidding inquiry: that is, the process of asking bidders to clarify.

Award: that is, the process that the tenderer decides the winning bidder according to the bid evaluation report.

For more information about project/service/procurement bidding, and to improve the winning rate, please click on the bottom of official website Customer Service for free consultation:/#/? source=bdzd