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RFP Response

Drafts evaluation-ready U.S. federal RFP responses across all standard proposal volumes (cover letter, technical, cost/price, reps and certs). Enforces FAR compliance, CPARS references, and Section L/M alignment. Use when preparing federal solicitation submissions, responding to government RFPs, or drafting procurement bids.

ID: us.regulatory.rfp-response Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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RFP Response

Produces a complete federal proposal structured to FAR requirements and scored against typical source selection criteria.

Prerequisites

Collect before drafting:

  1. RFP package — solicitation number, title, SOW, Section L/M instructions
  2. Contracting Officer — name, title, agency, address
  3. Offeror profile — legal name, UEI/CAGE, NAICS, small business certifications, SAM.gov status
  4. Past performance — 3–5 relevant contracts with CO/PM contacts, values, CPARS ratings
  5. Key personnel — resumes, clearance levels
  6. Cost data — indirect/fringe rates, labor categories and rates, subcontractor quotes

Quick Start

  1. Parse Section L (formatting) and Section M (evaluation factors) — these control everything
  2. Build a compliance matrix mapping every SOW/Section L requirement to a proposal section
  3. Draft volumes in order: cover letter → technical → cost/price → reps and certs
  4. Verify every capability claim cites past performance, test results, or published research
  5. Confirm all FAR/CAS citations against current regulations before submission

Proposal Volumes

1. Cover Letter (≤2 pages)

Include: addressee (named CO), solicitation reference, agency-specific mission knowledge, qualifications with CPARS ratings, compliance affirmation for all mandatory requirements, validity period (per solicitation, typically 60–120 days), authorized signatory with binding authority.

2. Executive Summary (≤3 pages)

  • Restate requirements interpretively — connect SOW to agency mission (do not paraphrase)
  • Differentiated solution with named methods, partnerships, or innovations
  • Quantified value proposition tied to documented past performance
  • Key personnel highlights and organizational depth

3. Technical Approach

Mirror SOW structure — one response per major task. For each task address:

  • Methods, tools, technologies, and rationale for selection
  • Resource requirements, dependencies, GFE/GFI needs
  • Integration points with agency systems or other contractors
  • Applicable standards (cite by name and number)
  • QA/QC protocols, acceptance criteria, corrective action process
  • Risk identification with specific mitigation plans
  • Technical diagrams (professional quality, labeled, referenced in text)

4. Management Plan

Org structure: management philosophy, org chart with key personnel (% time, reporting lines, sub interfaces), PM authority and span of control.

Resumes (consistent format): education, certifications, clearances, government contract experience, measurable accomplishments.

Schedule: milestones, deliverables, dependencies, critical path. Gantt or PERT format with historical duration estimates.

Administration: invoicing method/frequency, progress reporting cadence (CDRL-compliant), change control process, COR/COTR communication protocols, FAR clause procedural responses.

Staffing: recruitment plan, retention approach, succession plan, subcontractor oversight.

5. Past Performance

Per reference (3–5 projects):

Field Content
Client / agency Name, federal/state/local
Contract number Including vehicle (GWAC, IDIQ, etc.)
Type and value FFP/CPFF/T&M; total value
Period and scope Dates; elements paralleling current SOW
CPARS ratings By evaluation factor; "Satisfactory" or above
Outcomes Quantified savings, defect rates, on-time %, awards
Challenges Obstacles encountered and corrective actions
Reference contact Name, title, phone, email (verified, willing)

If limited prime experience: include key personnel track records and teaming partner experience with clear role delineation. Address any negative performance with corrective action narrative.

6. Cost/Price Breakdown

Structure by government cost element:

Element Detail
Direct Labor LCAT, hours by year/task, rate (loaded/unloaded)
Fringe / Overhead / G&A Rate %, allocation base, pool composition
Materials Itemized with vendor quotes for major purchases
Subcontracts Same breakdown as prime, per subcontractor
Travel Trips, destinations, duration, FTR per diem
ODCs Software, communications, printing, shipping
Fee/Profit Justified by risk, complexity, capital investment
  • Derive labor hours from historical actuals, industry standards, or bottom-up analysis — no unsupported round numbers
  • Apply index-based escalation (ECI, CPI) with cited sources for multi-year contracts
  • All costs must be allocable, allowable, and reasonable per FAR Part 31

7. Cost Supporting Documentation

  • [ ] Basis of Estimate narrative per major cost element
  • [ ] Labor rate documentation (payroll, salary surveys, market data)
  • [ ] Vendor quotes (current, ≤6 months; multiple for major items)
  • [ ] Indirect rate documentation: FPRA/PREA or rate build-up with CAS disclosure
  • [ ] Escalation factor support with index citations
  • [ ] Subcontractor proposals with competitive selection documentation
  • [ ] Accounting system description; CAS Disclosure Statements if applicable

8. Representations and Certifications

  • SAM.gov — confirm UEI, CAGE, NAICS, size standards current as of submission
  • Small business — verify against NAICS size standard; SBA cert current if WOSB/SDVOSB/HUBZone
  • Tax compliance — no delinquent federal tax liabilities (coordinate with finance)
  • Executive compensation — disclose if ≥80% federal revenue and >$25M
  • Procurement certs — OCI disclosures, conflict of interest, applicable statutes/EOs
  • Signatory — officer with actual binding authority; verify before execution

Legal risk: False certifications trigger termination, suspension/debarment, civil penalties, and criminal prosecution. Escalate any compliance uncertainty to legal counsel.

Pitfalls

  • Section L violations disqualify — every formatting requirement is mandatory; page limits are strict
  • No marketing language — every claim must cite evidence (past performance, certifications, test results)
  • Jargon balance — precise terminology but accessible to non-specialist evaluators
  • Graphics standards — all diagrams must be professional, labeled, captioned, and cited in text
  • Citation verification — confirm all FAR, CAS, and statutory references against current FAR/DFARS before submission
  • Jurisdiction — U.S. federal procurement only; apply DFARS supplements for DoD solicitations

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