Government RFPs
How Engineering and Architecture Firms Win Multi-Year Government Contracts in Canada
MERX isn't where Canadian government work lives, it's where it gets advertised. Here's how AEC firms actually win multi-year federal, provincial, and municipal contracts through the right mix of supply arrangements, vendor-of-record programs, and proposal infrastructure.
Summary
Canadian AEC firms that consistently win public-sector work don't respond to more RFPs, they're qualified in the right procurement vehicles, monitor the right portals, and have proposal infrastructure ready before calls drop. Here's the framework that separates high-win-rate firms from the rest.
Canadian AEC firms looking to grow their public-sector pipeline usually start with a misunderstanding: they assume MERX is where the work lives. It isn't. MERX is where opportunities get advertised. The real work sits inside procurement frameworks that decide who even gets invited to bid.
Federal, provincial, and broader public sector buyers, municipalities, school boards, Crown corporations, and hospitals, move most of their recurring architectural, engineering, and construction services through pre-qualified supplier pools. The firms that win consistently aren't the ones responding to every RFP they see. They're the ones qualified in the right vehicles, matched to the right buyers, and fast enough to respond when calls drop.
Federal: where AEC firms actually compete
At the federal level, Public Services and Procurement Canada runs several vehicles that matter for AEC work:
- Architectural and Engineering Services (AES) supply arrangements, used for consulting, design, and engineering task authorizations.
- Standing offers and National Master Standing Offers (NMSOs) for recurring inspection, commissioning, and specialized engineering work.
- Tendered RFPs on CanadaBuys and BuyandSell for larger construction and design-build projects above standing-offer thresholds.
Each vehicle has its own qualification cycle, categories, and document requirements. Firms qualified on one but not the others systematically miss opportunities they could win. The fix is deliberate: audit which departments actually buy the services you sell, then map backward to the vehicles those departments use.
Provincial: where the volume often lives
The Government of Canada is the largest buyer, but it isn't the most active for every AEC firm. Provincial and broader public sector procurement often generates more frequent opportunities, especially for mid-sized engineering and architecture firms.
- BC Bid aggregates British Columbia ministries, health authorities, and Crown agencies.
- Alberta Purchasing Connection covers provincial and MASH-sector opportunities.
- Supply Ontario operates vendor-of-record arrangements across Ontario's public sector, including hospitals, universities, and school boards.
- Municipal and regional portals, from Toronto to Halifax to Vancouver, post infrastructure, facilities, and consulting RFPs that never appear on federal platforms.
Firms focused only on federal work miss the majority of the Canadian public AEC market. Firms focused only on provincial work miss the largest average contract sizes. The wins go to teams who monitor both and respond selectively.
The Indigenous procurement factor
The federal government's mandatory 5% Indigenous procurement target is reshaping how contracts get awarded and teamed. Non-Indigenous AEC firms have responded in two legitimate ways: building genuine teaming relationships with Indigenous-owned firms as primes or subconsultants, and forming joint ventures with real operational substance, not paper arrangements. Done well, this opens doors to set-aside and restricted competitions that would otherwise be inaccessible. Done poorly, it invites audit and reputational risk. Buyers have become sophisticated at spotting pass-through structures.
Four habits that separate high-win-rate firms
Looking at the AEC firms that consistently win public-sector work, four habits show up everywhere:
- Qualification across multiple vehicles. They don't rely on a single supply arrangement or VOR. They maintain standing positions across federal, provincial, and municipal frameworks so they can respond wherever opportunities appear.
- Category focus over category breadth. Rather than claiming capability in every possible stream, they concentrate on three to five categories where their project history, certifications, and references are genuinely strong. Evaluators reward credible specialization and punish thin, generalist responses.
- Pre-built proposal infrastructure. A two-week response window isn't actually a two-week timeline. After kickoff, sign-offs, legal review, and portal upload, the real drafting window is often less than a week. Firms with reusable templates, tagged past projects, and written approach narratives consistently out-execute firms building from scratch.
- Systematic opportunity tracking. They don't monitor CanadaBuys manually. They track solicitations, award patterns, and upcoming refreshes across portals in a single feed, and they know which buyers bought from them before, which categories are heating up, and which refreshes are around the corner.
Where Stepscale fits in
Stepscale is built around this reality for Canadian AEC firms. RFP Radar pulls opportunities from MERX, BC Bid, Alberta Purchasing Connection, BuyandSell, Supply Ontario, and municipal portals into one ranked pipeline, scored against your firm's profile, past projects, and target categories.
Inside each opportunity, Stepscale surfaces your most relevant past work, extracts mandatory requirements and evaluation criteria into a structured checklist, and drafts sections grounded in your firm's real proposal language and project history, not generic boilerplate. A structured review pass flags missing compliance items before submission, which is where a surprising number of otherwise-strong bids get disqualified.
Multi-year government revenue in Canadian AEC isn't won by responding to more RFPs. It's won by being qualified in the right frameworks, spotting the right opportunities early, and turning institutional knowledge into proposals no competitor can write. That's the work Stepscale is designed to compound.