Well, more and conflicting and somewhat puzzling information is coming through. In fact It looks like a whole new ball game.
As I understood it originally, both Company A and Company B submitted the same set of specifications (which I assumed both received from the client as part of the bid documents/specification and thus this data is the client's)for the drawings and calculations to be done by STeelPe's company to then taken to a foundation subcontractor to complete the final bid to the client.
That both Company A & B chose SteelPE's company and the same foundation subcontractor is co-incidental.
Both SteelPEs company and the foundation subcontractor should have treated each company as unique and kept confidential any information from one about the other, including that they were quoting the other.
My assumption from my reading of the original post was that neither SteelPE's company discussions with A or B produced any original differences that would have resulted in a different quotation or final product by SteelPE's company.
Then both bought the solution and both went to a foundation contractor.
Here I understood they each found a different approach, but Company B's innovation which would have generated a different (better?) solution was revealed to Company A which caused Company B to comment on this to SteelPE's company.
I thought they were just whinging to SteelPEs company because they were upset by the foundation subcontractor's actions.
But subsequent posts make me think differently:
I believe Company A has benefited from some of the work we did for Company B. However, I believe that this was only to Company B's advantage. This is because the site is so bad that it is having an influence on the design of the structure and foundation system. Something Company A would have never known and would have gone in with a lower bid.
It appears the SteelPE bid to B should have been different to the bid to A
but it wasn't, Company A benefited from company B's initiative.
How and why?
Is this is because there was a mistake in the bid to A or was simply a better bid was generated for B?
If SteelPE's company made a mistake and the bid to A was unsound and SteelPEs recognised the mistake independently then they can remedy the defect and make good the quote to A.
If a mistake and the discussion with B resulted in this mistake being discovered, SteelPe's company should simply rescind the quote to A and recommend they approach another contractor.
This is because if A and B approached different contractors and A's made a mistake, and A didn't ask the questions that discovered it, then A is stuck with it.
Hence the only quote that should be improved because of Bs astuteness is B's quote. SteelPE's company cannot maintain a wrong quote and they cannot rectify it becasue then A benefits from B's input, hence they should rescind it as invalid but without detail.
But if the original bid to A is valid and sound and the difference, that was only generated by discussions with B, results in a better offer? then both bids should be separate and valid and different.
There were some questions (and raised eyebrows) at this point but a subsequent post makes this unnecessary:
It emerges :
He (SteelPE's colleague) informed him (B) that the quote that we had done previously for Company A on the preliminary design did not include certain aspects which Company B requested and we performed free of charge. (i.e. the result of Company B's initiative, the fee is irrelevant)He asked Company B for permission in giving the same drawings and information to Company A.
This doesn't sound right to me.
If this happened before Company A got hold of the improved offer and as described here, then why are we having this dialogue on ethics?
It would appear this is agreed by consenting adults.
It
appears from the following B agreed.
I don't see/completely believe this version.
If I was B I'd be very very pleased to have found an advantage and I'd want it kept quiet - but I shouldn't know I had an advantage because I shouldn't know that I have a different quote or even that A is getting a quote from SteelPe's company.
This all now sounds like some after the event cover up.
The only way A should get the same result would be if they asked the right questions, as B did.
In return he would reduce the bill by 1/3 and submit the same bill reduced bill to Company A in order to recoup some of the lost expenses due to scope creep.
Company B was receptive of the idea and thanked my colleague for notifying them of his intentions. He then gave him permission to send the information to Company A.
I'd suspect company B was only receptive of the idea (getting some of their money back) if this was all enacted after the horse had bolted.
Otherwise If I were company B I'd be saying "No. You don't volunteer a thing to A! Its their lookout if they didn't ask the right questions."
It sounds to me that offering 1/3 off was an attempt to mollify B who was upset that A had access to the benefits of B's initiative.
If this reading is correct then I'd not expect to see B come back as a client in future.
JMW