Information
On this page you can find information based on both public data and non-public data that comes from your own evaluated award decisions.
Public data contracting authority
Click on "Compare Entity" and search for a contracting authority.
First you see the core data of this contracting authority. How many tenders they have, how many suppliers, how many suppliers on average register for a tender and what the total value is of the tenders awarded.
You will then see all tenders and you can filter them by winners or CPV code. You see the name of the plot, who the winner is, what the value is and what the price/quality ratio is.
In the bar chart "number of tenders per year" you can see how many tenders the contracting authority places online per year.
In the bar chart "distribution of value of contracts" you can see the value of the contracts of the contracting authority. This way you can gain insight into the size of the contracts that a contracting authority offers.
In the bar chart "number of contracts to expire per year" you can see (also in the future) how many contracts expire per year.
You can see who the suppliers are to the contracting authority. You can filter this by CPV code so that you only see the suppliers who win tenders within your CPV code. You can also see how many employees the suppliers have and how many tenders they have won with the contracting authority.
Furthermore, in the bar chart "prevalence of price/quality ratio" you can see how often the different ratios between price and quality occur in tenders of the contracting authority. In the pie chart next to it you can see the procedure types used in percentage terms.
In the table "prevalence of quality criteria" you can see the award criteria used by the contracting authority, including the average weighting.
In the pie chart "type of assignment" you can see the different types of assignments for this contracting authority in percentage terms. These results are based on the CPV codes associated with the tenders. The CPV codes are classified within the European procurement guidelines as supplies, works or services.
Finally, you can see the current assignments. In this table you can see the name of the tender, who the supplier is, what the value is and what the next due date is. If you see that a tender will soon expire, your organization can prepare in advance to make the best possible offer for the contract when it becomes available again.
Compare public data on contracting authorities
You can select a second entity. In this way you can, for example, compare two municipalities with each other. It may be interesting to see which municipality places more tenders online or at which municipality the contracts have a higher value.
Non-public data registering party
We obtain the non-public data from evaluated award decisions
Click on "Compare entity" and search for a registering party (for example your own organization)
You will first see a performance overview showing how many registrations your organization has submitted, how many registrations have been evaluated and a percentage of won and lost tenders.
You will also see the evaluated and unevaluated tenders with the name of the lot, the contracting authority, the awarded party and the scores on price and quality. You can filter the evaluated registrations by won or lost, CPV code or NACE codes.
In the "customers" table you can see who your organization has contracts with and what the total turnover is from these contracts.
In the graph "performance over the years" you can see how many tenders your organization has won and lost over the years. This is non-public data based on evaluated award decisions.
In "feedback per quality criterion" you can find the tenders per quality criterion. The quality criteria you see in the table were entered during the evaluation of an award decision as matching award criteria. This ensures that the award criteria from different tenders fall under the same constant. This way you can constantly see the various tenders with the score and feedback on this award criterion.
You can filter by writer here. This can be useful to see whether a particular writer scores less well on certain criteria so that this writer can learn from another writer who scores better on this.
In the bar chart "tenders won per year" you can see how many tenders you have won per year. This is public data.
In the bar chart "distribution of value of contracts" you can see the value of the tenders that you have won.
In the graph "score of quality criteria per tender" you can see how you scored for each award criteria and in which tender you were assessed on that quality criterion. You can also see the prevalence of the award criterion (how often did this award criterion appear in the total number of evaluated tenders). The dots are displayed from old (left) to new (right). If you click on the dot you will be taken to the project page of the tender right.
NB! It happens that an award criterion has a prevalence of 5/23. This means that of the 23 evaluated award decisions, 5 sub-criteria are linked to this overarching award criterion. It is possible that these 5 sub-criteria all came from the same award decision and that is why only 1 dot from the relevant tender appears in the graph.
In the bar chart "price/quality ratio of won tenders" you can see how often the different ratios between price and quality occur in tenders that your organization has won.
In the table "prevalence of quality criteria for won tenders" you can see, if you have won a tender based on quality, which quality criteria these are.
In the "price distribution" graph you can see your tender prices for different tenders. Price data is not always shared in award decisions, so this table remains empty. The data in this table comes from the evaluations in Altura. The more information entered during the evaluation, the more comprehensive the information in market insights is.
Finally, you can see the current assignments. In this table you can see the name of the tender, who the supplier is, what the value is and what the next due date is.
Compare non-public data on contracting authorities
You can select a second entity. In this way you can, for example, compare your organization with a competitor. For example, you can see how you score on price compared to your competitors.