
- June 3, 2025
- Sean Gellis
- 0
Welcome to FloridaProcurements.com (FlaProc), your authoritative resource for navigating Florida’s government contracting landscape, with particular focus on transportation and technology opportunities. FlaProc provides free, expert guidance to help companies identify and secure state contracting opportunities throughout Florida.
This resource is maintained by Attorney Sean Gellis of Gellis Law, PLLC, one of less than 75 attorneys Board Certified in State and Federal Government and Administrative Practice by The Florida Bar. Mr. Gellis brings unique insight to government contracting, having served as the Chief of Staff of the Florida Department of Management Services (DMS), General Counsel of the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), and Deputy General Counsel of the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation – positions that provided direct oversight of technology initiatives and issues of statewide importance. His record in bid protest litigation reflects the sophisticated advocacy and strategic thinking he brings to government contracting matters, particularly in complex transportation and technology procurements. Sean also leads Procurement Insider, a confidential subscription service that provides technology vendors with strategic intelligence and insider analysis of Florida government opportunities. Learn more about transforming your approach to government contracting at www.gellislaw.com/procurement-insider
The Hidden Landmines of Florida Procurement: Why “Shall” and “Must” Can Kill Your Bid
As the Florida Department of Management Services’ new $90 million Management Consulting RFP gets underway, vendors are carefully preparing their responses, checking off each item in the “Mandatory Responsive Requirements” section. But here’s what many don’t realize: those explicitly listed requirements are just the tip of the iceberg.
Buried throughout procurement documents—sometimes dozens of pages deep—are additional “shall” and “must” requirements that carry the same force as the headline mandatory criteria. Miss one of these hidden requirements, and your otherwise perfect proposal could be declared nonresponsive, regardless of how competitive your pricing or impressive your qualifications.
The Language That Matters: Understanding Procurement Grammar
In government procurement, word choice isn’t arbitrary—it’s legally significant. Understanding this linguistic hierarchy can mean the difference between winning a contract and watching your proposal get disqualified on a technicality.
Mandatory Language:
- “Shall”: Creates an absolute requirement with no discretion
- “Must”: Equally mandatory, leaving no room for interpretation
- “Will”: Also mandatory when describing vendor obligations
Permissive Language:
- “May”: Indicates an option or possibility
- “Should”: Suggests preference but isn’t mandatory
- “Can”: Describes capability but doesn’t require action
The problem? Many vendors focus solely on the numbered “Mandatory Responsive Requirements” section while skimming over the detailed specifications where additional “shall” and “must” requirements lurk.
A Real-World Cautionary Tale
During my tenure as FDOT General Counsel, I witnessed a perfect example of how these hidden requirements can derail even sophisticated vendors. A major firm submitted what appeared to be an excellent proposal for a multi-million-dollar consulting contract. They met every requirement in the mandatory checklist, provided competitive pricing, and demonstrated impressive qualifications.
But they missed one critical detail.
Deep within the technical specifications—not highlighted in any mandatory requirements section—was a single sentence requiring that vendors “shall address their hurricane emergency preparedness plan.” This wasn’t just a suggestion or a nice-to-have; it was a binding requirement using mandatory language.
When the vendor failed to include this plan, their proposal was declared nonresponsive. Despite having the best qualifications and most competitive pricing, they were eliminated from consideration. The ensuing bid protest was unsuccessful because the requirement was clearly stated in the solicitation documents, even though it wasn’t prominently featured.
Why These Hidden Requirements Exist
Government agencies don’t typically scatter mandatory requirements throughout documents to trip up vendors. These requirements often appear in technical specifications because:
- Subject matter experts write different sections: The procurement team writes mandatory requirements, while technical staff write specifications
- Requirements evolve during drafting: New requirements get added to technical sections without updating the mandatory checklist
- Industry-specific needs: Technical specifications often contain requirements that are obvious to industry insiders but not highlighted for general readers
- Legal compliance: Some requirements stem from statutes or regulations that must be addressed but aren’t always prominently featured
The Management Consulting RFP: A Case Study in Hidden Requirements
The current DMS Management Consulting procurement (RFP No. 25-80101500-RFP-V2) perfectly illustrates this challenge. While the solicitation clearly lists mandatory responsive requirements in Attachment B, vendors must also navigate numerous “shall” and “must” requirements scattered throughout the 18-page main document and various attachments.
Examples of hidden mandatory language in the RFP:
- “The Respondent shall provide clarifying information or documentation”
- “Vendors must be registered in the MyFloridaMarketPlace Vendor Information Portal”
- “The Contractor shall provide all management, administrative, clerical, and supervisory functions”
- “The Respondent shall indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the Department”
Each of these represents a binding obligation that could render a proposal nonresponsive if not properly addressed, even though they’re not listed in the formal mandatory requirements section.
A Systematic Approach to Identifying All Requirements
Step 1: Create a Requirements Matrix
Don’t just read the procurement—systematically extract every requirement:
- Start with explicit mandatory requirements: List everything in the formal mandatory section
- Search for mandatory language: Use document search functions to find every instance of “shall,” “must,” and “will”
- Analyze context: Determine which instances create vendor obligations versus agency rights
- Cross-reference attachments: Repeat the process for all incorporated documents
Step 2: Map Requirements to Response Sections
For each identified requirement:
- Determine where in your proposal it should be addressed
- Identify if special documentation is needed
- Note any requirements that might conflict or require coordination
- Flag requirements that need input from specific team members
Step 3: Create Compliance Checklists
Develop detailed checklists that include:
- All explicit mandatory requirements
- All hidden “shall/must” requirements
- Required certifications and documentation
- Submission format and delivery requirements
- Deadline compliance items
Common Categories of Hidden Requirements
Financial and Legal Obligations
- Bonding and insurance requirements
- Indemnification clauses
- Truth-in-negotiation certificates
- Financial reporting obligations
Operational Commitments
- Staffing level guarantees
- Response time commitments
- Quality assurance procedures
- Record retention requirements
Compliance and Certification
- Background check requirements
- Licensing and registration mandates
- Minority business enterprise goals
- Environmental compliance standards
Performance Standards
- Service level agreements
- Reporting frequency and format
- Customer satisfaction metrics
- Continuous improvement obligations
Red Flags That Signal Hidden Requirements
Watch for these warning signs in procurement documents:
Technical Specification Sections: Often contain operational requirements using mandatory language
Service Level Descriptions: Frequently include binding performance commitments
Contract Terms Attachments: Usually loaded with vendor obligations
Industry-Specific Requirements: May assume familiarity with standard practices
Regulatory References: Often incorporate external requirements by reference
The Material Deviation Standard
Understanding when a missed requirement constitutes a “material deviation” is crucial. Florida procurement law generally considers a deviation material if it:
- Provides a substantial advantage to one vendor over others
- Has a potentially significant effect on proposal quality
- Affects the cost to the state
- Compromises the integrity of the competitive process
Even seemingly minor omissions can be deemed material if they relate to mandatory requirements, regardless of whether those requirements were prominently featured.
Practical Prevention Strategies
For Proposal Managers
- Assign requirement extraction: Have team members systematically identify all mandatory language
- Cross-functional reviews: Include legal, technical, and operational staff in requirement analysis
- Compliance matrices: Create detailed tracking documents for all requirements
- Final compliance check: Conduct systematic review before submission
For Technical Writers
- Requirement mapping: Clearly link each proposal section to specific requirements
- Explicit compliance statements: Directly address each mandatory requirement
- Cross-referencing: Link related requirements addressed in different sections
- Compliance summaries: Provide clear statements of how each requirement is met
For Quality Assurance
- Independent review: Have someone unfamiliar with the proposal check compliance
- Checklist verification: Systematically verify every identified requirement
- Document integrity: Ensure all required attachments and certifications are included
- Submission compliance: Verify format, delivery method, and timing requirements
The Cost of Getting It Wrong
The consequences of missing hidden mandatory requirements extend beyond just losing one opportunity:
Immediate Impacts:
- Proposal disqualification regardless of merit
- Wasted proposal preparation costs
- Lost competitive positioning
- Team demoralization
Long-term Consequences:
- Reputation damage with the procuring agency
- Reduced credibility for future opportunities
- Internal process questions and reviews
- Competitive intelligence gathered by rivals
Building Institutional Knowledge
Organizations that consistently succeed in government contracting develop systematic approaches to requirement identification:
Process Documentation: Create standard procedures for analyzing solicitations
Training Programs: Ensure proposal teams understand procurement language nuances
Lessons Learned: Document and share experiences from both wins and losses
Tool Development: Build templates and checklists for common requirement types
Relationship Building: Maintain connections with agency staff who can clarify requirements
Looking Ahead: The Evolution of Procurement Complexity
As government procurement continues evolving, requirement complexity is likely to increase rather than decrease. Factors driving this trend include:
- Enhanced compliance and transparency requirements
- Increased focus on performance measurement
- Greater emphasis on risk management
- More sophisticated service delivery models
- Growing attention to equity and inclusion
Successful vendors will be those who develop robust systems for identifying and tracking all requirements, not just the obviously mandatory ones.
Conclusion: Vigilance as a Competitive Advantage
In the high-stakes world of government procurement, attention to detail isn’t just about quality—it’s about survival. While your competitors focus on pricing strategies and technical approaches, systematic requirement compliance can become a significant competitive advantage.
The vendors who consistently win government contracts aren’t necessarily those with the lowest prices or flashiest presentations. They’re the ones who meticulously identify every requirement, methodically address each obligation, and never assume that “mandatory” means only the items in the mandatory section.
As you prepare responses to Florida procurements—whether it’s the current management consulting opportunity or future solicitations—remember that “shall” and “must” aren’t just words. They’re binding obligations that can make or break your proposal, regardless of where they appear in the documents.
The investment in systematic requirement analysis pays dividends not just in avoiding disqualification, but in building the kind of thorough, compliant proposals that procurement evaluators respect and agencies trust.
Don’t let a hidden “shall” requirement derail your next proposal. In government procurement, the details don’t just matter—they determine winners and losers.
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