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NAICS Snapshot: Wyoming DOT Contractors “Bid Information” (NAICS 275666)

Mar 02, 2026Jordan PatelSolicitation Intelligence Lead3 min readnaics compare
WyomingDOTBid lettingContractor informationNAICS
Opportunity snapshot
Bid Information
Wyoming DOT ContractorsNAICS: 275666
Posted
Due

Executive takeaway

The posting titled “Bid Information” looks like a Wyoming DOT contractor information page focused on advertised projects, upcoming bid lettings, letting results, and bid tabulations—plus a note that each letting will be broadcast online. Based on the snippet alone, it does not read like a discrete, scoped procurement; confirm whether there is an actual bid package/advertisement linked in attachments or referenced pages before committing capture resources.

What the buyer is trying to do

From the available text, the buyer is organizing and communicating how contractors can track and participate in highway-related bid lettings, including:

  • Finding advertised projects in upcoming bid lettings
  • Reviewing bid letting results and bid tabulations
  • Accessing schedules, contracts & estimates, and related contractor resources
  • Attending the bid letting broadcast online (Zoom is referenced in the snippet)

What work is implied (bullets)

  • Monitoring upcoming advertised projects and letting schedules
  • Preparing bids for WYDOT construction projects that appear in the advertised letting list
  • Reviewing bid tabulations and weighted average bid price information for market intelligence
  • Participating in the letting event broadcast online as part of bid submission/observation activities
  • Potential compliance review for items referenced in the hub (e.g., DBE information is mentioned in navigation text)

Who should bid / who should pass (bullets)

  • Should bid: Highway/civil contractors and subs that routinely pursue state DOT let lettings and can respond quickly once specific advertised projects are identified.
  • Should bid: Firms building a pipeline in Wyoming that need recurring visibility into bid schedules, tabulations, and letting mechanics.
  • Should pass (for now): Teams looking for a single, well-defined solicitation with a clear scope and deadline—this notice appears informational unless attachments/pages contain a specific project advertisement.
  • Should pass (for now): Firms that cannot support DOT letting cadence (multiple releases, revisions, and schedule-driven bids).

Response package checklist (bullets; if unknown say 'verify in attachments')

  • Verify in attachments whether a specific advertised project package is included (plans/specs, quantities, and bid schedule)
  • Verify bid submission instructions and forms in attachments (if any)
  • Verify any referenced contractor requirements (e.g., DBE-related instructions) in attachments/linked pages
  • Verify whether the online letting broadcast is informational only or required for bidders
  • Verify deadlines—no posted date/response deadline is provided in the opportunity record

Pricing & strategy notes (how to research pricing; do not invent pricing numbers)

Use the materials referenced in the notice to ground your pricing approach:

  • Pull prior bid tabulations to see winning bid structures and competitiveness by work type.
  • Review any weighted average bid price references to understand typical unit-price ranges.
  • Track letting schedules and align internal estimating capacity to the cadence (multiple lettings can compress estimate windows).
  • If attachments include contracts & estimates, validate what cost elements are typically included/excluded for WYDOT work.

Subcontracting / teaming ideas (bullets)

  • Prime contractors can line up local/capacity subs ahead of the next advertised letting to reduce scramble when projects post.
  • Subcontractors should monitor the advertised-project list and proactively market to primes bidding the same letting.
  • If DBE participation is relevant (navigation text references DBE), identify qualified partners early and confirm any documentation needed (verify in attachments).

Risks & watch-outs (bullets)

  • The notice content appears to be a bid-information hub rather than a single procurement—confirm that there is an actual project advertisement to respond to.
  • No posted date or response deadline is included in the record; treat schedule details as to-be-verified.
  • The snippet contains repeated navigation text; key requirements may live on linked pages/attachments not included here.
  • Online letting broadcast is mentioned—verify whether it is merely observational or tied to bid acceptance/announcement.

Related opportunities

How to act on this

  1. Open the posting and confirm whether it links to a specific advertised project/bid letting with downloadable bid documents.
  2. If a project is identified, pull bid tabulations and any weighted average bid price references to calibrate your estimate strategy.
  3. Validate submission steps and schedules (verify in attachments/linked pages).
  4. If you want help determining whether this is actionable (and what to chase next), contact Federal Bid Partners LLC for capture support and bid/no-bid triage.

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