
TenderIQ
Decide whether to bid - before you commit the effort.
3 followers
Decide whether to bid - before you commit the effort.
3 followers
Decision intelligence for UK public sector bids. Analyse tender packs, assess risk and effort, and decide whether to bid with confidence.

Hey Product Hunt !
I’m Dimeji, and I built TenderIQ because too many teams commit weeks of bid effort before knowing whether a tender is actually worth pursuing.
The Problem
In UK public sector bidding, the real cost isn’t finding tenders - it’s wasting time on the wrong ones.
Teams often start bidding without clear answers to basic questions:
Are we actually competitive here?
Is there an incumbent advantage?
What’s missing or unclear in the tender pack?
How much effort will this realistically take?
By the time those answers become obvious, weeks of bid time are already gone.
What We Built
TenderIQ is decision intelligence for public sector bids.
Upload the tender pack and get a clear, evidence-based view of whether to proceed — before committing your team.
It provides:
Bid readiness scoring based on the actual ITT (not assumptions)
Critical gaps surfaced early (evaluation weightings, deadlines, submission rules, pricing structure)
Effort and risk visibility (document volume, pass/fail risks, mobilisation or TUPE signals)
Influence & incumbent signals to flag low-probability bids
Market intelligence showing who actually wins similar contracts and at what values
This isn’t a tender aggregator or proposal writer.
It’s a go / no-go decision layer.
Why This Matters
Large organisations have capture teams and bid governance.
Most SMEs don’t — they rely on instinct, past experience, and hope.
TenderIQ helps teams protect bid capacity, avoid false optimism, and focus effort where success is plausible.
Early Access Offer
We’re onboarding a small group of early users to shape the product:
£1 first month
Discounted pricing for the next phase
Direct access to me for feedback and iteration
I’d Love Feedback On
How do you currently decide whether to bid - and where does it break down?
What signals would give you confidence to not bid?
If you sell into government outside the UK - is this decision problem similar where you are?
Happy to answer any questions about how the analysis works, what data we use, or where this is heading.