If you’re entering the government contracting arena for the first time, it’s good to take a broad, top-level view of how you might approach what can become a lucrative business opportunity. This particular blog stays out of the weeds, and is meant to give you an overarching perspective on how to approach your new revenue stream.
The best proposals reflect a thorough understanding of an agency’s requirements, demonstrate the highest performance standards, make their submission deadlines, and deliver on price-value fit. Mastering the scientific art of government proposal writing and pre-award process is a long-tail venture. With practice, you’ll find your groove.
1. Writing your proposal
a. Before you write, read the RFP three times. Familiarity breeds success. The more you’re able to absorb what the government is looking for in a Request for Proposal (RFP), the more comfortable you’ll become with ways to present your content correctly. Look beyond the Requirements of Service included in the Statement of Work. Become familiar with the expectations included in the Provisions and Contractual Clauses sections as well, and make sure you consider them in your government proposal writing.
b. Prepare an outline of the Solicitation Requirements. Some RFPs include specifics on proposal length, content, format, areas to address, and presentation techniques. Once created, your outline of these requirements can serve as a helpful checklist. Map your writing to it at every step in the draft process.
c. If there are multiple authors, agree on tasks and timelines. Bring all members of your proposal writing team together for a 15-minute standup meeting, every other day as you write. Make sure each person understands their respective role in the government proposal writing process, and during your initial meeting, establish schedules for each proposal area’s preparation. If you find that responsibility areas overlap, adjust assignments as needed. In more complicated government procurements, your timelines may be several months. But in others, the agency you’re working with may allow only 30 days for writing—sometimes less. Proposal deadlines are usually non-negotiable.
2. Pricing your proposal
b. Review Section L of the schedule for all pricing volumes. The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) determines the correct way to organize each proposal; you’ll find those instructions in Section L of your Pricing Schedule.
c. Prepare a Compliance Matrix for the cost volume. This cross-referenceable table demonstrates to an agency where and how you’ve responded to specific RFP requirements in your contract submission. It helps confirm that you’ve included all pricing information you need to be compliant.
3. Packaging your proposal
d. Present your proposal in a format agencies are glad to accept. Both your team and the agency team should be on the same formatting page in order to efficiently review, negotiate, and award government contracts. To accomplish this, both teams should ideally use the same proposal platform. ProPricer Contractor Edition provides you with the software and resources you need for a successful bid process and fully syncs with ProPricer Government Edition on the agency side. With Contractor Edition, you’ll prepare your proposal using a modern SaaS tool that synchronizes data, generates pricing reports, initiates complex what-if scenarios, standardizes your pricing environment, and more. If you’d like to give ProPricer a try, you can use our ProPricer Express edition for free. See how easy it is to convert an existing proposal into ProPricer format. Or request a live ProPricer Contractor Edition demo here.
4. Submitting your proposal
a. Submit only what is asked for. Include everything the government requires in your proposal—but nothing less and nothing more. If you exclude relevant technical details or include long-winded narratives when they’re not specifically asked for, your proposal may not be included in the competitive range. And as a result, you won’t be eligible for a contract award. Again, pay particular attention to the agency provisions outlined in Section L of the contract’s RFP, and follow these instructions to the letter.
b. Mail your proposal well in advance of its deadline. Don’t wait until the last minute to submit your proposal in response to an agency’s solicitation. Mail your proposal at least a week ahead of the deadline, and send it by certified or registered mail. Don’t run the risk of wasting the time, effort, and money you’ve spent preparing your proposal—only to miss the deadline.
c. If hand-delivering your proposal, submit only to the correct office and official. You can hand-carry a proposal to the government, but make certain you deliver it to the agency’s acquisition office, and specifically to the correct contracting officer working there. The person at the front desk in the lobby of the agency’s federal building can guide you to the correct floor, but never leave your envelopes with that receptionist directly. Once you’ve located the correct contracting officer, you can ask for a receipt. Of course, these rules only apply to new agency relationships. Once you know the ropes and people involved, the process can be more relaxed.
d. If your submission is late, be prepared to present evidence as to why. There are times when an agency will accept a late proposal if a contracting officer has made a modification request or asked for a “best and final offer” late in the game. Rarely does this happen, and it’s pretty much the sole exception for the government’s acceptance of a late proposal. If the government has mishandled your proposal on their end—such that it’s received by a contracting officer past a deadline—you’ll be asked to present postmark and tracking evidence that proves you weren’t delayed in your submission process. 1
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Sources
2 Cavu Advisors Article - Five Best Practices, Three Bad Mistakes