
Saves significant time by auto-populating bids and reusing previous answers from a central content library. It also enables real-time collaboration, so multiple team members can work on the same bid without version conflicts. On top of that, it provides a structured workflow and tracking (tasks, deadlines, progress), which improves control over submissions.
Upsides of using easyPQQ --------
It improves the quality and consistency of proposals, which can increase the chances of winning work. It centralises bid knowledge (CVs, case studies, answers) so everything is easy to find, access, and reuse. It also boosts efficiency and productivity through automation, smart search, and suggested responses, and helps teams meet tight deadlines by streamlining the overall tendering process. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
What I find most helpful about easyPQQ is how much it speeds up bid writing. Being able to reuse previous answers and keep all bid content centralised in one place makes it far easier to stay organised. It also supports real-time collaboration, so teams can work on the same submission at the same time without running into version-control headaches. Overall, it improves efficiency and consistency across proposals, which helps produce higher-quality bids more quickly.
Downsides of using easyPQQ
Because it’s fully web-based, there’s no offline access, so work can grind to a halt if the internet connection is poor. I’ve also seen formatting and editor issues, such as bugs, export problems, and copy/paste glitches. Compared with tools like Word, there’s limited flexibility for editing and styling. On top of that, some users report navigation and usability frustrations, including a need for better search and a more intuitive experience. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

