Electronic tendering system guide launched by Tender Board
The Tender Board on Thursday published a procedural guide for raising requests to publish tenders and auctions through the electronic tendering system, officials said. The guide, aimed at spending entities, was released on the council’s website and is intended to streamline tender submissions and accelerate delivery of government projects and services.
According to the council, the guide sets out the legal and technical requirements for entering tender data, attaching documents and requesting post-publication amendments in the electronic tendering system. The move forms part of ongoing efforts to improve government procurement efficiency and institutionalise procedures.
What the guide covers and how it works
The guide provides a detailed, step-by-step workflow for preparing and submitting tender requests via the electronic tendering system. It explains how to populate required fields, upload approved documentation, complete quantity and pricing schedules, and respond to review comments.
Furthermore, the guide outlines the formal process for issuing addenda and other post-publication changes after a tender has been released. The procedural manual also references the related regulatory framework, including the law regulating tenders and auctions, its executive regulations and the council’s circulars and decisions, according to the published material.
Main features to improve tender submissions and transparency
The council said the guide will help standardise submissions, reduce corrective back-and-forth and shorten the overall procurement cycle. By requiring consistent data entry and clearer documentation, officials expect the quality of tender submissions to improve and administrative delays to fall.
In addition, the adoption of the electronic tendering system is presented as a measure to strengthen procurement transparency and governance. Therefore, the council anticipates that a unified digital approach will widen participation by suppliers and contractors and support fair competition.
Institutional impact and expected benefits
Engineer Jamal Abdulaziz Al-Alawi, secretary-general of the Tender Board, described the guide as a developmental step within the council’s wider programme to raise public procurement performance. Officials said the guide aims to institutionalise procedures while reducing time and effort for spending entities.
Meanwhile, the guide is expected to support better use of public resources by improving the accuracy and completeness of requests, which can reduce administrative corrections and increase efficiency across procurement workflows. Furthermore, clearer procedures may make it easier for new suppliers to participate in government procurement opportunities.
Operational details and compliance requirements
The manual functions as an operational reference for staff responsible for preparing and uploading tender materials. It specifies the legal and technical documentation that must accompany requests and clarifies which fields are mandatory when creating a submission in the system.
Additionally, the guide provides guidance on completing quantity and pricing tables, tracking reviewer comments and managing the issuance of contractual addenda. Officials noted that adherence to the guide is intended to ensure alignment with statutory obligations under the law regulating tenders and auctions and related implementing rules.
Technical and procedural notes
Technical instructions in the guide address document formats, naming conventions and required metadata to facilitate consistent processing in the electronic tendering system. Therefore, procuring departments are advised to review the checklist before submitting requests to minimise follow-up corrections.
Training and support provisions were mentioned as part of the council’s rollout strategy, with officials indicating that user guidance and helpdesk channels will be available to assist entities as they transition to standardised digital procedures.
How to access the guide and next steps
The guide is available for download from the Tender Board’s official website at www.tenderboard.gov.bh. Entities responsible for procurement are encouraged to consult the manual when preparing new tenders or when updating existing workflows.
Looking ahead, officials said the council will monitor implementation and gather user feedback to inform future updates to the electronic tendering system and the guide itself. Therefore, readers should watch for supplemental circulars and technical bulletins that may follow in the coming months.
Conclusion and what to watch next
The publication of the guide marks an administrative step intended to increase the consistency and speed of government procurement through the electronic tendering system. Observers and procurement professionals should track how quickly spending entities adopt the new procedures and whether the changes produce measurable gains in efficiency and procurement transparency.
Officials indicated that further refinements to the system and instructional materials may arise from early implementation feedback, and stakeholders are advised to monitor the Tender Board website for updates and training opportunities.

