B2GB2G (business-to-government) is when a company sells goods or services to a government body, usually through a public procurement process. From a supplier’s perspective, B2G work often involves responding to tenders, meeting compliance and evaluation rules, and contracting under public terms. It differs from B2B because the “customer” is a public authority and buying decisions must follow transparent procedures, budgets, and regulatory requirements.
Buying and procurementBuying and procurement are the activities an organisation uses to obtain goods and services, from identifying a need to placing orders and paying suppliers. Buying (or purchasing) usually refers to the transactional step of ordering and paying, while procurement is broader and includes planning, sourcing, supplier selection, negotiation, contract management, and performance control. For suppliers, procurement sets the rules and process for competing for work, while buying is the point where the contract or order is executed.
Contract awardContract award is the formal decision to give a contract to a chosen supplier at the end of a tender or competition. The buyer selects the supplier based on the published award criteria (for example, price and quality) and then issues an award decision and completes any required notices, such as a contract award notice and, where applicable, a standstill period. In public procurement, a contract can also be awarded directly without competition in limited, legally permitted situations, and awards under frameworks may have specific notice and call-off rules.
Contract award noticeA contract award notice is a formal public notice that a contracting authority has decided to award a public contract to a named supplier. It summarises the outcome of the procurement, such as the winning bidder, contract value, scope, and key dates, and helps suppliers understand who won and why. In the UK it is published on the relevant platform (for example Find a Tender) and may also be required for awards made under a framework, including call-off contracts, depending on the applicable rules and thresholds.
Procurement business processA procurement business process is the end-to-end set of steps an organisation uses to identify a need, source suppliers, buy goods or services, receive and manage delivery, and pay for what was bought. It typically includes requirements definition, market engagement, tendering or quote collection, evaluation, contracting, purchase order and invoicing, and ongoing supplier and contract management. For suppliers, it determines how opportunities are advertised, what evidence is required, how bids are assessed, and how quickly approvals and payments move. Business process automation can support procurement by digitising workflows like approvals, tender communications, and invoice matching to reduce delays and errors.
Procurement cycleThe procurement cycle is the end-to-end sequence of steps an organisation follows to plan, source, buy, and manage goods, services, or works, from identifying a need through to contract close-out. It typically includes needs definition, market engagement, tendering, evaluation, award, delivery, payment, and performance management. Public sector procurement often standardises these stages to ensure fairness, transparency, and auditability. For suppliers, the cycle sets when opportunities are published, what evidence is required, and how contract performance is measured and renewed.
Procurement lawProcurement law is the set of legal rules that governs how organisations buy goods, services, and works, including how they plan, advertise, award, and manage contracts. In public procurement it aims to ensure fair competition, transparency, and equal treatment of suppliers, and to reduce fraud and waste. For suppliers, procurement law shapes the tender process, the information buyers must publish, the criteria used to evaluate bids, and the remedies available if the rules are breached.
Procurement stagesProcurement stages are the main steps an organisation follows to identify a need and buy goods, services, or works, from planning through tendering to contract management. A common “procurement cycle” includes defining requirements, analysing the market, choosing a sourcing strategy, running the tender, evaluating bids, awarding the contract, and managing delivery and performance. For suppliers, each stage signals what information to provide, when to bid, and how decisions and compliance checks will be made. Some procurements use two-stage tendering, where suppliers are shortlisted first and submit full offers later.
Procurement stepA procurement step is a distinct stage in the procurement process that moves a purchase from identifying a need to selecting a supplier, contracting, receiving goods or services, and paying for them. Each step has specific tasks, documents, and approval checks that create auditability and reduce risk. For suppliers, procurement steps signal what information to provide and when, such as during market engagement, tender submission, contract award, and delivery management.
Procurement teamA procurement team is the group in an organisation that plans and manages how it buys goods, services, and works from external suppliers. It sets sourcing strategy, runs tenders or other buying processes, evaluates bids, negotiates contract terms, and manages supplier performance and risk. In public sector procurement it also helps ensure transparency, equal treatment, and compliance with procurement rules. For suppliers, the procurement team is usually the main route into opportunities and the primary contact for clarifications, submissions, and contract award.
Social value procurementSocial value procurement is the practice of using the buying process to deliver additional social, economic, and environmental benefits alongside the core goods, works, or services being bought. In public sector procurement, buyers usually set social value outcomes in the specification and evaluate them in tender criteria, then manage delivery through contract KPIs and reporting. For suppliers, it means explaining how your delivery model will create measurable community benefits, not just offering the lowest price or meeting technical requirements.
Tender noticeA tender notice is a formal public announcement that a buyer is inviting suppliers to bid for a contract. It summarises the opportunity and explains how to access the tender documents, key requirements, deadlines, and how to submit a bid. In public procurement it is published on official portals (for example Find a Tender) to ensure transparency and open competition; whether one is required for a call-off contract depends on the route used and the applicable rules.