Technical specifications, evaluation criteria and mistakes to avoid.
Tendering smart classrooms in Colombia requires drafting specifications with clear technical requirements, balanced evaluation criteria and provision for support and training, while avoiding being tied to a single brand.
In Colombia, purchases above the minor contracting threshold go through Secop. The entity must draft terms of reference that describe functional — not brand-specific — technical requirements.
Specify what the classroom must do, not which brand to buy: minimum screen size, touch technology, offline operation, included software, warranty and support response time. Functional specifications enable genuine competition.
Price should not be the only criterion. Weight technical quality, deployment experience, training, post-sale support and references. A cheap bid that does not include training or support costs more in the long run.
The most common mistakes in smart classroom tenders: specifying a single brand, leaving out teacher training, ignoring total cost of ownership and not requiring a deployment pilot before full rollout.
Colombia's public procurement platform (Sistema Electrónico para la Contratación Pública). All public procurement above the minor contracting threshold must be published and managed through Secop.
By writing functional requirements instead of brand names or proprietary model numbers. Describe what the equipment must do, not which product to buy.
No. The law requires weighing quality, experience, support and price. Choosing only on price usually results in equipment that is underused or unsupported after installation.
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