--- name: inst-gov-procurement-mode description: Use when a law firm, legal tech vendor, or legal AI platform is responding to a government Request for Proposal (RFP) or Request for Quotation (RFQ), completing a security questionnaire, preparing compliance attestations, or drafting bid pricing for a public-sector legal services or legal technology contract. Covers MENA public procurement frameworks (KSA, UAE, LB, EG) as well as standard international procurement requirements. Activates document-generation mode for procurement-specific outputs including reference letters, attestations, and multi-year pricing models. license: MIT metadata: id: inst.gov-procurement-mode category: inst jurisdictions: [KSA, UAE, LB, EG, GCC, __multi__] priority: P1 intent: [__inst__, government-procurement, RFP, RFQ, bid, compliance, public-sector] related: [inst-ksa-moj-integration, inst-uae-moj-integration, draft-service-agreement-gov, kb-ksa-government-tenders] source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal) version: "1.0" --- # Inst — Government Procurement Mode ## Purpose Government procurement of legal services and legal technology follows specialized rules across MENA jurisdictions. This skill activates a structured operating mode for preparing, reviewing, and submitting government bid packages — covering RFP/RFQ responses, security and compliance questionnaires, attestation letters, customer references, and bid pricing strategies. --- ## When to use this - A law firm is bidding on a government legal services panel tender (KSA Ministry panels, UAE federal panels, Lebanese government retainers) - A legal AI vendor (including Louis/HAQQ) is responding to a government IT or professional services procurement - A user needs to complete a security questionnaire from a government agency - A user is preparing a compliance attestation (ISO 27001, SOC 2, GDPR/PDPL equivalents, Najiz-compatible data standards) - A user is drafting a reference customer letter for inclusion in a government bid - A user needs to model annual vs multi-year pricing for a public-sector engagement --- ## Inputs | Input | Required | Notes | |---|---|---| | Jurisdiction | Yes | Determines procurement law framework | | Procurement type | Yes | Legal services / IT / professional services | | Contracting authority | Yes | Ministry, court, regulator, municipality | | Scope of services | Yes | What is being procured | | Evaluation criteria | If available | Price/quality split; local content requirements | | Incumbent vendor | Optional | Affects pricing strategy | | Security classification | Optional | Public / restricted / confidential | --- ## Document types ### 1. RFP / RFQ response template Structure for a full bid response: 1. Executive summary (1-2 pages) — tailored to agency's stated priorities 2. Technical proposal — approach, methodology, team qualifications 3. Relevant experience — prior government work, case studies (anonymized if required) 4. Staffing plan — named leads, CVs, licensing confirmations 5. Compliance section — local content %, Saudization/Emiratization rates, SME status 6. Commercial proposal — pricing schedule (see below) 7. Annexes — certifications, bar registrations, insurance certificates ### 2. Security questionnaire Common government security questions and standard compliant responses: - Data residency (does data leave the country?) - Encryption standards (at rest: AES-256; in transit: TLS 1.2+) - Access control (RBAC, MFA, audit logs) - Incident response (SLA, notification timelines — PDPL Art. 24 / UAE Data Protection Law) - Sub-processor list (cloud providers, APIs used) - Penetration testing cadence ### 3. Compliance attestations - ISO 27001 certification status - SOC 2 Type II report availability - Compliance with jurisdiction-specific laws: - **KSA**: National Cybersecurity Authority (NCA) Essential Controls (ECC-1:2018); PDPL (Personal Data Protection Law 2021) - **UAE**: UAE Information Assurance Standards; UAE PDPL (Federal Decree-Law No. 45 of 2021) - **LB**: No dedicated PDPL yet (draft circulating); apply GDPR standard by analogy for international tenders - **EG**: Law No. 151 of 2020 (Personal Data Protection) ### 4. Reference customer letters - Format: on official letterhead, addressed to the contracting authority - Content: scope of work performed, duration, volume, satisfaction statement, contact details - Caution: obtain client's explicit consent; check NDA scope before referencing government matters ### 5. Bid pricing strategies #### Annual vs multi-year | Model | Pros | Cons | Best for | |---|---|---|---| | Fixed annual | Simple; easy to budget | No volume discount lever | Short tender cycles | | Multi-year with escalation | Predictable; CPI escalator protects margin | Locked in if scope grows | 3-5 year panels | | Tiered / volume | Wins on cost score; scales | Complex to model | High-volume matters | | Time-and-materials cap | Flexible for unknown scope | Risk of over-run | Regulatory/advisory | | Retainer + success fee | Aligns incentives | Uncommon in gov; scrutiny | Litigation panels | **MENA-specific note**: KSA and UAE government tenders frequently require a **local content percentage** declaration (Nitaqat in KSA; In-Country Value / ICV in UAE). Price models must demonstrate local staff ratios. --- ## Jurisdictional procurement frameworks | Jurisdiction | Framework | Key rules | |---|---|---| | KSA | Government Tenders and Procurement Law (Royal Decree M/128 of 2019) | e-platform Etimad; local content; Saudization percentage declared | | UAE (federal) | Federal Law No. 6 of 2018 on Public Procurement | e-GP platform; ICV certificate required; SME preference | | UAE (DIFC/ADGM) | DIFC/ADGM procurement policies (common-law framework) | Less prescriptive; FIDIC-based contracts common | | LB | Law No. 244 of 2000 on Public Tenders | Central Tender Board (CTB); paper + digital; post-2019 crisis has affected public procurement activity | | EG | Law No. 182 of 2018 on Public Procurement | Monaa3sat platform; local + foreign supplier rules; 10% price preference for domestic | --- ## Common mistakes - **Generic bids**: government evaluators score differentiation — always reference the agency's specific mandate and language from the tender documents - **Missing local content declaration**: non-compliance disqualifies bids in KSA and UAE - **Security questionnaire gaps**: leaving fields blank fails compliance scoring — provide "Not Applicable / Reason" rather than leaving empty - **Pricing arithmetic errors**: multi-year models must reconcile line items — generate pricing tables in structured format and verify totals - **Over-promising SLAs**: government contracts have penalty clauses; propose realistic SLAs with cure periods --- ## Related skills - [[inst-ksa-moj-integration]] - [[inst-uae-moj-integration]] - [[draft-service-agreement-gov]] - [[kb-ksa-government-tenders]] - [[kb-uae-procurement-law]]