RFQ Guide · MPN-led procurement
What Procurement Teams Should Include in a Technical RFQ
A complete, decision-ready request for quotation lets a sourcing partner act on the first read. This is the checklist of fields that turn a vague enquiry into a structured quotation — and the reasoning behind each one.
Why the brief matters
Quoting speed is a data problem before it is a sourcing problem
Most quotation delays are not caused by availability. They are caused by ambiguity — a part number with no manufacturer, a quantity with no delivery market, a specification described in words instead of a standard. Every gap forces a clarification cycle, and every clarification cycle adds days. Technical sourcing starts with the part number, and a well-formed RFQ removes the back-and-forth before it begins.
BOLTON is an MPN-led technical procurement and sourcing company headquartered in Abu Dhabi, UAE, supporting defence, military, aviation and aerospace, marine and industrial MRO buyers across the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Australia. The more precisely you describe what you need, the faster a structured, documentation-aware quotation comes back. The checklist below is what we look for on the first read.
The checklist
Ten fields that make an RFQ quotable
Treat the first five as the minimum to start; the remaining five sharpen the quotation and reduce the risk of re-quoting. You do not need a perfect dataset to begin — but the more you supply, the fewer rounds it takes.
| Field | Why it matters / how it speeds quoting | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Part number (MPN) | The manufacturer part number is the unambiguous identifier. It removes guesswork about form, fit and function, and lets sourcing begin against the exact item rather than a description. | Required |
| Manufacturer / brand | The same MPN can exist across more than one maker, and cross-references are not always identical. Naming the manufacturer (for identification only) pins the item down and avoids quoting the wrong equivalent. | Required |
| Quantity | Quantity affects how the item is sourced and packaged, and whether a line is a one-off or a recurring requirement. It frames the entire response. | Required |
| Specification / standard | Where an MPN is unknown, the governing specification, drawing or standard (e.g. a material grade, thread standard, ingress rating or military specification) lets us identify candidates. It also protects the specification against a non-conforming substitute. | Required |
| Delivery location / market | Naming the destination market — UAE, Saudi Arabia or Australia — lets us coordinate export-aware sourcing and the right documentation set from the start, rather than rework after the fact. | Required |
| Required documentation | Stating up front whether you need a Certificate of Conformity, material/lot traceability or a datasheet means the documentation requirement is sourced alongside the part, not chased afterwards. | Recommended |
| Required date | A target need-by date lets us prioritise routing and flag any lines that may be difficult within your window — before they become a surprise. | Recommended |
| Alternatives acceptable (Y/N) | Telling us whether an equivalent is acceptable — or whether the exact MPN is mandatory — decides whether we can broaden the search. A clear "no substitutes" is just as useful as a "yes". | Recommended |
| Application context | A short note on where the item is used (the platform, assembly or environment) helps validate fit and catch mismatches a part number alone would not reveal. | Helpful |
| Bill of materials | Sending a BOM or line list in one structured file lets multi-line requirements be quoted together, with consistent documentation and a single point of coordination. | Helpful |
Route your RFQ
Send it to the right capability
If your line items map to one of these areas, naming it in the RFQ helps the request reach the right reviewer faster. Mixed BOMs are welcome — these are signposts, not silos.
Avionics, Electronics & Interconnect
Connectors, harness components and electronic items where the MPN and spec are critical.
Mechanical, Motion & Hardware
Bearings, fasteners, latches and mechanical parts identified by standard or drawing.
MRO, Tools, Workshop & Test
Hand tools, workshop consumables and test items for maintenance and repair operations.
Safety, PPE & Hazmat
Protective equipment and safety items where rating and standard drive compliance.
Electrical, Lighting & Power
Electrical components, lighting and power-distribution items across industrial settings.
Products Hub
Browse the catalogue to confirm an item or reference a part before you submit.
From enquiry to quotation
What happens after you submit
A documentation-led process means each line is reviewed against what you supplied, then returned as a structured response. Decode the part number, protect the specification.
Intake & decode
Your part numbers, specifications and BOM lines are read and normalised against the manufacturer and standard you named.
Identification
Each line is confirmed by MPN, or candidate matches are proposed from the specification where the MPN is unknown.
Documentation alignment
The documentation you requested — CoC, traceability, datasheet — is mapped to the destination market and coordinated with the sourcing.
Structured quotation
You receive a line-by-line response, with any substitution questions and timing flags made explicit so you can decide quickly.
Answers
Frequently asked questions
What is the minimum information needed to start an RFQ?
A part number with its manufacturer, the quantity, and the delivery market are enough to begin. If you do not have a part number, a clear specification or standard plus the application context lets us identify candidates. The more fields you complete, the fewer clarification rounds are needed before a quotation is returned.
Why does the manufacturer name matter if I already have the part number?
The same manufacturer part number can appear across more than one maker, and cross-references between brands are not always exact equivalents. Naming the manufacturer — used for identification only — removes that ambiguity and prevents an unintended substitution. It does not imply any distributor, partner or approval relationship between BOLTON and the brand.
What documentation should I request in an RFQ?
State whatever your quality or compliance process requires — commonly a Certificate of Conformity, material or lot traceability, or a manufacturer datasheet. Specifying this at RFQ stage means the documentation requirement is considered alongside the part, rather than being chased after a quotation is issued.
Should I say whether alternatives are acceptable?
Yes. Telling us whether an equivalent is acceptable, or whether the exact MPN is mandatory with no substitutions, directly shapes the search. A firm "no substitutes" protects a controlled specification; an "alternatives welcome" lets us broaden options where that serves you better.
Can BOLTON handle RFQs delivered to different markets?
BOLTON is headquartered in Abu Dhabi, UAE, and supports procurement teams across the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Australia with export-aware, cross-border sourcing coordination. Naming the destination market in your RFQ lets us align the documentation and routing to that market from the outset.
How should I submit a multi-line bill of materials?
Send it as a single structured list with one row per line — part number, manufacturer, quantity, specification and any documentation note. Submitting the BOM together rather than as separate enquiries allows the lines to be quoted in one coordinated response with consistent documentation. You can attach it through the RFQ form.
Does BOLTON quote stock levels or pricing on this page?
No. This is a guidance page, not a price list. Availability, lead time and pricing are confirmed per request through a quotation once your RFQ has been reviewed, because they depend on the exact item, quantity, documentation and destination you specify.
Ready when you are
Turn your part numbers into a structured quotation
Have an MPN, a specification or a full BOM in hand? Submit it with the fields above and we will return a documentation-aware, line-by-line response.
Manufacturer and part names, where referenced, are used for identification purposes only and do not imply that BOLTON is an authorised distributor, official partner or approved vendor of, or otherwise affiliated with, any brand. Availability, lead times and pricing are confirmed per RFQ and are not guaranteed.
