No-bid analysis
No-Bid Now, Track It Later: Opportunities Worth Watching
Some contracts are not right today but worth watching for the recompete. I explain how I flag these so you are ready when the timing finally fits.
The short version
Some contracts are not right today but worth watching for the recompete. I explain how I flag these so you are ready when the timing finally fits.
No-Bid Now, Track It Later: Opportunities Worth Watching is the half of intelligence nobody markets, because saying no is harder to sell than another lead, even though it protects more of your time. I work in this corner of government procurement every day, so the rest of this piece is the practical view: what I actually watch, how I read it, and how I decide what is worth your time.
What I watch, and why
I watch for the signals that an opportunity is not worth pursuing, no matter how appealing it looks on the surface.
The point is not to collect more sources for the sake of it. It is to make sure that when something relevant appears, it actually reaches you, instead of slipping past on a quirk of how it was labelled or where it was posted.
How I qualify what comes up
I give you the reasoning for walking away, and where it makes sense, I flag the opportunity to revisit at the recompete instead.
That qualification follows the same order on every opportunity, because the cheapest mistakes to catch are the ones at the top of the list.
- Mandatory requirements first. They are pass or fail, so if you cannot meet one, nothing else matters and I say so.
- Scope of work. What is actually being bought, at what volume and term, and whether it matches the work you want more of.
- Evaluation criteria. How the bid is scored, so I can judge whether you can realistically place high enough to win.
- Red flags and fit. The signals that an opportunity is wired, marginal, or simply not worth the hours it would cost.
Where vendors usually go wrong here
The recurring mistake is treating discovery as the finish line. Finding an opportunity is the easy part. The expensive part is deciding, honestly and early, whether it is worth pursuing, and then tracking it so a late change does not undo your preparation.
- Trusting a single source or a narrow set of keywords to catch everything relevant.
- Reacting to a posting without checking the mandatory requirements that decide fit first.
- Ignoring amendments and addenda, then preparing against a scope that has quietly changed.
- Chasing attractive-looking work that the evaluation never gave you a real path to win.
The bottom line
Every wasted pursuit is time stolen from a winnable one. Knowing what to skip is exactly why disciplined qualification pays for itself.
If you want to see this applied to your own trade and jurisdictions, the fastest way is a short call. Tell me where you bid and what you chase, and I will come to it with the picture as it actually looks for you.
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More on no-bid analysis
When Not to Bid: The Opportunities Worth Walking Away From
Knowing what to skip is half the value of good intelligence. I lay out the signals that tell me an opportunity is not worth your time, no matter how attractive it looks.
ReadThe Real Cost of Chasing Bad Bids (and How to Stop)
Every wasted pursuit is time stolen from a winnable one. I break down the true cost of bidding the wrong work and how disciplined qualification pays for itself.
ReadStop wasting estimator time on the wrong bids.
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