26 August 2025

A Beginner’s Guide to Using AI Prompts in Your Bidding

Artificial Intelligence (AI) can be a powerful assistant during the bidding process, but many expect it to be the silver bullet that will churn out high quality, polished bid responses with little to no effort. This month we’ve seen newly published Public Sector tenders requiring bidders to submit declarations about the use of AI in their bid submission so you need to make sure to check the output of content and don’t simply copy, paste and submit it.

AI isn’t here to replace bid professionals and subject matter experts, but it WILL save time, improve consistency, and unlock new ways to present content to speed up the time it takes you and your business to create a high quality first draft bid response.

There are many use cases for AI in bidding but based on our experience of using it as a bid consultancy, as individual bid professionals from across a variety of industries and a software development business, we have found that the best place to start is with creating draft bid content. Find out more in our previous article on Leveraging AI in Public Sector Bidding: Why It Matters and How to Start to get more information.

Prompting – What is it, and how is it different to ‘Googling’?

Great question, they look similar on the surface (“I type something in, and I get an answer”), but prompting and Googling are actually quite different in how they work and what you get back:

Googling

Prompting

Think of it like this:

Just like Googling, and the famous phrase about ‘something in, something out’ prompting is only as good as the questions you ask it.

With that in mind, here are some easy-to-use examples to get you started with using AI prompts in your bidding:

  1. Rewriting Content to Fit Word Count

The thorn in the side of any bid professional – word counts! Sometimes responses need to be longer (to add detail) or shorter (to meet strict word limits). AI can help expand or summarise content while keeping the key points intact.

Example prompts:

 

  1. Rewriting for Different Buyers or Sectors

Often, you’ll need to tailor existing answers to suit a different buyer (e.g., NHS vs Local Authority) or sector (healthcare vs education). AI can quickly adapt terminology and emphasis using your prompting.

Example prompts:

 

  1. Changing Style or Tone of Voice

Bids often need a specific style – professional, persuasive, or easy-to-read. AI can take your existing text and adjust the tone to suit; it will however change from your company tone of voice in your past bid responses.

Example prompts:

 

  1. Using Existing Responses to Answer New Questions

Instead of starting from scratch, you can repurpose past answers. AI can combine, reshape, or reframe content to address a new question.

Example prompts:

 

  1. Other Practical Use Cases

 

Key Tips for Beginners

 

There are limitations to general purpose AI tools which is why Virtual Bid Team was created by our bid team, for bid teams. We’ve already spent hours getting frustrated with hallucinated content from ChatGPT, CoPilot and other AI tools which is why we created our own. If you want to see how your team can create high quality first draft responses in half the time then speak to our team today to find out how AI can be best used in your bidding.