Summary
Cooperative Purchasing: State and Local Government Sales Leverage federal contracts to sell to state and local governments.
Leverage federal contracts to sell to state and local governments.
Summary
Cooperative Purchasing: State and Local Government Sales Leverage federal contracts to sell to state and local governments.
Identify cooperative purchasing programs relevant to your products or services. Research each program's membership base and geographic coverage, purchasing volume and growth trends, categories and scope of contracts offered, competitive process and evaluation criteria, and administrative requirements and fees. Prioritize cooperatives aligned with your target markets and growth strategy.
Each cooperative has specific requirements for participation. Review solicitation documents carefully to understand pricing requirements and discount expectations, reporting obligations and frequency, administrative fees as a percentage of sales, insurance and bonding requirements, and technology requirements for order processing. Ensure you can meet these requirements profitably before investing in pursuit.
Cooperative contracts are typically awarded through competitive procurement, often against established competitors. Prepare your proposal to demonstrate competitive pricing that works across the member base, relevant experience and past performance, operational capability to serve geographically dispersed customers, customer service and support capabilities, and value-added offerings that differentiate from competitors.
If awarded a contract, complete all administrative requirements including master agreements and participation documents, insurance certificates and bonding if required, registration in ordering and reporting systems, marketing materials and catalog listings, and training on program procedures and expectations.
Contract placement creates potential, but you must actively market to convert potential into sales. Develop marketing strategies to reach eligible members including promotional communications, conference participation, digital marketing, and direct sales outreach. Many contractors underestimate the marketing investment needed to capitalize on cooperative placement.