Sources sought notices and RFIs come before a solicitation, when agencies are deciding how to buy and from whom. Responding well can shape the requirement and put you on the radar early. We write responses that do both.
A sources sought response is short, but it does real work. Here is what we make sure yours accomplishes.
A clear demonstration that you can meet the requirement the agency is exploring.
Your certifications surfaced so the agency can consider a set-aside you qualify for.
Work that proves you have done similar jobs, framed to the agency need.
Where appropriate, input that can shape the requirement toward what you do well.
Direct responses to exactly what the notice asks, nothing padded or off-topic.
A response prepared and submitted before the notice closes.
Responding to sources sought and RFIs suits businesses that want to be in early on upcoming work.
No guesswork. Here is what happens once you book a call.
A specialist analyzes what the agency is asking and what a strong response needs.
We identify how to show capability and, where it fits, shape the requirement your way.
We write a clear, on-point response to exactly what the notice requests.
You review the draft and we submit it before the notice closes.
Often yes. It is how agencies decide how to buy and who is out there. A good response can put you on the list and even steer the requirement toward your strengths.
No. A sources sought or RFI response is information for the agency, not a bid. It positions you for the solicitation if and when it comes.
It is much shorter and earlier in the process. It signals capability and interest rather than offering a priced solution. We handle both stages.
Most clients combine a few of these to build a complete federal presence. Here is what fits alongside this.
Book a free call and a specialist will review the notice with you.