Capability statements help Jamaican firms win procurement work
Entrepreneurs chasing steadier cash flow often overlook a document that procurement officers and corporate buyers rely on when assessing new suppliers: the capability statement.
Unlike a brochure or a company website, a capability statement is a concise professional brief — typically one or two pages — written to answer the exact questions buyers raise when deciding whether to engage a vendor.
A solid statement spells out core competencies in plain language, documents past performance with named clients, and cites measurable results wherever possible. It should also highlight differentiators that set the firm apart from rivals, plus key company details such as registration number, Tax Compliance Certificate (TCC) status, insurance cover, and years in business. Contact information must name a specific person rather than listing only a generic email address.
Artificial intelligence can assist with the draft. Feeding Claude.ai the business history, client list, and outcomes allows the tool to shape that material into the formal phrasing buyers expect. Canva.com can then turn the text into a polished layout that reads as institutional rather than DIY.
Syndicated from PBC Jamaica (Video) · originally published .
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