Why 'best and final offer' pricing is rarely either
Three vendors. Three proposals. All three labeled "best and final." If that weren't a red flag, it wouldn't happen in every single RFP.
Here is what "best and final offer" actually means in IT vendor pricing: "this is the number we put on the first page so you stop asking questions." It is not the vendor's floor. It is the vendor's opening position, wrapped in language designed to shut down further negotiation.
The tell is almost always the same. When you get three or four competing proposals and each one arrives stamped "BFO," you should hear alarm bells, not reassurance. If every vendor in a competitive process claims they have already given you their lowest number, then at least some of them are lying. Probably most of them.
Where the real cost hides
The headline price is the least interesting number in a vendor proposal. The real cost structure lives in the details that are easy to skip when you are reading each proposal in isolation:
- Bundled vs. unbundled services. Vendor A includes tier-2 support in their base price. Vendor B unbundles it as an add-on that activates in month four, after your team has already started logging tickets. On paper, Vendor B looks cheaper. In practice, by month six you are paying more.
- Escalation timing. Year-one pricing is often subsidized, deliberately. The real question is what year two and year three look like. A 7% annual escalator on a $360k contract is $25k in year two, $50k in year three, and $77k in year four. Most proposals mention escalation. Few show you the compounding math.
- Optional services with vague triggers. "Project management included for standard implementations" sounds inclusive until you discover that your migration is classified as non-standard, which activates a separate SOW at day rates you never negotiated.
What side-by-side comparison reveals
Reading one proposal carefully teaches you what that vendor is offering. Reading three proposals side by side, structured into matching categories, teaches you what each vendor is hiding.
When you normalize the format and align the line items, gaps appear that are invisible in any single document. One vendor includes remote monitoring in their base, another charges it as a per-device add-on that only shows up on page fourteen. One includes quarterly business reviews, another charges them as a professional services engagement.
The gap between the proposals is where your negotiating leverage lives.
What to demand instead
Three specific asks that move you past the BFO label:
- Request a total-cost-of-ownership table for years one through three. Not year one in isolation. Force the compounding math into the open.
- Ask each vendor to price the same service basket. Define your scope in your own terms and insist every proposal respond to that same scope. Vendor-defined scopes are designed to make comparison difficult.
- Separate committed costs from optional costs. Anything labeled "assumes" or "if needed" should be priced on the same page as the base, not in an appendix.
None of this is adversarial. It is structured diligence. And the vendors worth working with will not flinch at it.
ITBluPrint runs structured proposal evaluations for companies who want apples-to-apples comparisons before they sign. If you have proposals on your desk right now, we can help you see what they are actually offering. Start with a free scoping call.
