The First 48 Hours After Receiving an RFPThe First 48 Hours After Receiving an RFP

The First 48 Hours After Receiving an RFP Change Everything

The moment an RFP lands in the inbox, most companies make a silent but dangerous mistake.

They start preparing to bid
before deciding whether they should bid at all.

This is where most losses begin.

Not during writing.
Not during pricing.
But during the first 48 hours, when RFP analysis should guide leadership decisions—but often doesn’t.


Why Companies Bid Without Thinking

In many organizations, the RFP response process looks like this:

  • Sales forwards the RFP

  • Leadership says, “Let’s go for it”

  • The proposal team starts writing

  • Pricing is rushed at the end

At no point does anyone pause to ask the most important question:

Is this RFP strategically winnable for us?

This reactive approach turns RFPs into hope-based bids, not strategy-led decisions.


The Purpose of the First 48 Hours: Strategic RFP Analysis

The first two days are not meant for drafting responses.

They are meant for decision-level RFP analysis focused on:

  • Risk exposure

  • Evaluator expectations

  • Competitive positioning

  • Pricing realism

  • Delivery feasibility

Skipping this step forces proposal teams to “write their way out of risk”—which rarely works.


What a Proper Go/No-Go Strategy Looks Like

1. Read the RFP Like an Evaluator, Not a Bidder

Most teams read RFPs looking for how to respond.
Decision-makers should read RFPs looking for how bids will be scored.

Key questions:

  • Where are points concentrated?

  • Which sections are pass/fail?

  • What risks is the agency trying to avoid?

This is where RFP analysis becomes strategic instead of administrative.


2. Identify Hidden Disqualifiers Early

Some RFPs quietly favor:

  • Incumbents

  • Local vendors

  • Vendors with specific government past performance

  • Vendors aligned with certain frameworks (NIST, CMMC, CJIS, etc.)

These signals are rarely stated openly, but they appear in:

  • Mandatory experience clauses

  • Reference requirements

  • Evaluation weighting

Ignoring them leads to wasted effort.


3. Assess Pricing Before Writing

Pricing should be evaluated before writing starts.

Leadership must ask:

  • Can we price this realistically without undercutting delivery?

  • Does the budget match the scope?

  • Is this likely a Best Value or Price-Driven award?

RFPs are often lost because pricing was treated as a final step, not a strategic decision.


4. Evaluate Internal Readiness Honestly

Winning an RFP doesn’t end at award—it begins there.

Ask:

  • Do we have the right staff available now?

  • Are key roles named or implied?

  • Are timelines aggressive or forgiving?

If delivery confidence is weak, the bid is already risky—no matter how well written.


Why Skipping Go/No-Go Analysis Lowers Proposal Scores

When companies bid without thinking:

  • Proposals feel generic

  • Pricing appears unrealistic

  • Risks are under-addressed

  • Evaluators score conservatively

Evaluators don’t penalize effort.
They penalize uncertainty.

And uncertainty is born when early RFP analysis is skipped.


What Top Firms Do in the First 48 Hours

High-performing bidders treat the first 48 hours as a strategy window, not a writing sprint.

They:

  • Conduct structured RFP analysis

  • Run internal Go/No-Go reviews

  • Decide positioning early

  • Decline bids that weaken win probability

Saying no to the wrong RFP often creates capacity to win the right one.


Executive Go/No-Go Checklist (First 48 Hours)

Before approving any bid, leadership should confirm:

  • ✔ We understand how this RFP will be scored

  • ✔ We can price this without delivery risk

  • ✔ We meet both stated and implied requirements

  • ✔ We can differentiate meaningfully

  • ✔ This bid aligns with long-term business goals

If two or more boxes are uncertain, the bid deserves deeper review—or decline.


Final Thought

Most RFP losses don’t happen at submission.

They happen quietly, in the first 48 hours, when companies confuse activity with strategy.

Strong RFP analysis and a disciplined Go/No-Go approach protect time, money, and reputation—and significantly improve win probability.

Request a Bid Strategy Review 👉

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *