Know your BMS scope before you go to tender.
You are pricing the mechanical and electrical work. The BMS scope is buried across specifications, schedules and drawings. You need to define it accurately before your controls subcontractor can quote. Tenderfly extracts the BMS-relevant equipment from your tender pack and gives you an independent scope baseline.
The problem
M&E contractors send the full tender pack to two or three BMS subcontractors and wait for quotes. If those quotes come back with different scope assumptions, different equipment counts and different point totals, you cannot compare them. You are choosing between numbers without knowing which one is right.
What Tenderfly does
Extracts every piece of BMS-relevant equipment from your mechanical tender documents. Classifies each item by type, interface method and control requirement. Produces a scope definition that tells you exactly what needs to be controlled, monitored and integrated. Gives you a baseline to evaluate BMS subcontractor returns against.
Who it's for
M&E contractors who subcontract the BMS package and need to define scope accurately before going to market. Also relevant for quantity surveyors and cost consultants validating BMS allowances in project budgets.
Stop comparing BMS quotes blind.
If you are an M&E contractor and want an independent BMS scope baseline from your tender documents, we should talk.
