Stages 3 + 4 of 7 - Recommendation and routing
What did AI recommend - and who did it call?
Four department packets were created for pursuit-readiness review.
What the AI did
The AI treated this as a presolicitation capture decision. It did not ask whether to submit a final bid today; it asked which departments need to qualify the pursuit before BD/Ops invests more capture effort.
Legal should clear readiness for either a FAR contract or an OT path because the Government has kept instrument type and terms open for negotiation.; Existing AFRL SETA, A&AS, or similar support by the company or a teammate is a material OCI risk that can undercut capture readiness for a technical-performer role.
Classification handling is still a presolicitation unknown because DD254 guidance is not yet issued; Security should treat this as a follow-up gate before the next solicitation step rather than a present blocker.; Pre-award security review is a real pursuit kill gate; the opportunity should only advance if key personnel and the organizational profile are likely to clear the Government's risk threshold.
Finance should treat OT eligibility and one-third non-Federal cost share as a major pursuit risk unless a qualifying non-traditional defense contractor or nonprofit participant will contribute to a significant extent.; If the deal moves toward a cost-reimbursement path, Finance must verify award readiness around a government-approved accounting system.
This is a normal presolicitation gate, not a no-pursue blocker: capture should staff a compliant white paper now and defer full-proposal build-out unless invited.; Implementation staffing is a serious pursuit risk if the delivery plan depends on non-U.S.-citizen personnel for base, facility, or Government-network access.
Specialist packets routed to
Legal
- Legal should clear readiness for either a FAR contract or an OT path because the Government has kept instrument type and terms open for negotiation.
- Existing AFRL SETA, A&AS, or similar support by the company or a teammate is a material OCI risk that can undercut capture readiness for a technical-performer role.
- DLIS registration and certification are a hard participation gate that should be verified before more capture spend is committed.
- Any pursuit strategy that depends on non-SBIR data rights below unlimited rights carries negotiation risk and should be cleared early with Legal.
Security
- Classification handling is still a presolicitation unknown because DD254 guidance is not yet issued; Security should treat this as a follow-up gate before the next solicitation step rather than a present blocker.
- Pre-award security review is a real pursuit kill gate; the opportunity should only advance if key personnel and the organizational profile are likely to clear the Government's risk threshold.
- Any solution architecture that stores Government or Government-related data in the cloud needs an authorized provider path before the next solicitation step.
- If the concept could become classified, Security needs a credible facility-clearance and cleared-personnel path because the requirement may apply at award rather than post-award.
Finance
- Finance should treat OT eligibility and one-third non-Federal cost share as a major pursuit risk unless a qualifying non-traditional defense contractor or nonprofit participant will contribute to a significant extent.
- If the deal moves toward a cost-reimbursement path, Finance must verify award readiness around a government-approved accounting system.
Implementation
- This is a normal presolicitation gate, not a no-pursue blocker: capture should staff a compliant white paper now and defer full-proposal build-out unless invited.
- Implementation staffing is a serious pursuit risk if the delivery plan depends on non-U.S.-citizen personnel for base, facility, or Government-network access.
- Solutions that embed third-party software need early dependency and licensing review because proposal disclosure and later Government license approval are required.