
First Nations Access Resources

FNAR Partnerships

We partner with businesses seeking to strengthen their tender submissions and ongoing project engagements. Partnering with First Nations Access Resources offers a range of benefits, including:
​
-
Access to our specialist tender preparation team
-
Expansion of your workforce through our comprehensive database and recruitment services
-
Support in meeting social procurement and Indigenous engagement requirements
-
Guidance to ensure organisational and regulatory compliance
-
Comprehensive tracking and reporting on all aspects of your tender

01
Individual or Joint Tender
We partner with businesses throughout their tender process, either as a joint tender participant—helping to achieve First Nations social procurement targets—or by supporting your business to meet engagement, procurement, and employment objectives. Our expertise ensures your tender is competitive, compliant, and aligned with best practice in Indigenous engagement and social responsibility.
02
Employment & Engagement
We strengthen our tender partners’ workforce by leveraging our extensive database and recruitment services to fill the roles required for successful project delivery.
​
Where possible, we actively encourage the engagement of Indigenous candidates, creating opportunities for both community members and businesses to benefit from available incentives and contribute to meaningful social outcomes.

03
Track & Report

First Nations Access Resources provides comprehensive tracking and reporting throughout every stage of project delivery, ensuring transparency, accountability, and measurable outcomes. Our approach includes monitoring workforce participation, social procurement achievements, and Indigenous engagement against agreed targets, with regular, structured reporting to partners and stakeholders. This enables businesses and communities to clearly demonstrate progress, meet compliance requirements, and identify opportunities for continuous improvement, all while supporting meaningful social and economic outcomes for First Nations people