First 90 Days Plan to Enter Federal Contracting


Small business owner following a 90-day plan to start government contracting

Most businesses fail at federal contracting not from lack of capability, but from lack of structure — they register, wait, and nothing happens. This 90-day plan replaces that drift with a proven sequence that takes you from unregistered to actively bidding.

Quick Answer

A 90-day plan to enter federal contracting has three phases: Days 1–30 build the foundation (SAM.gov registration, UEI, NAICS alignment, capability statement); Days 31–60 position and target (agency list, award research, OSDBU outreach); Days 61–90 build the pipeline and bid (saved searches, Sources Sought responses, subcontracting, first proposals). A first award typically follows in 6–18 months of consistent activity.

Why 90 Days?

Most businesses that fail at federal contracting do not fail because they lack capability. They fail because they treated it as a someday project with no structure — they registered in SAM, waited, and nothing happened. A 90-day plan replaces that drift with a sequence: specific actions, in the right order, with a clear finish line where you are actively bidding.

Ninety days is enough time to go from unregistered to pipeline-active if you work the plan consistently. This is the same three-phase structure Biz2Gov uses with clients. Here is the full roadmap, week by week.

First 90 Days in Federal Contracting DAYS 1–30 Foundation • Register in SAM.gov• Get your UEI• Align NAICS codes• Optimize SBS profile• Build capabilitystatement DAYS 31–60 Position • Build target agency list• Research award history• Contact OSDBU offices• Check certifications• Tailor capabilitystatement to buyers DAYS 61–90 Pipeline & Bid • Set up saved searches• Build bid/no-bid process• Respond to SourcesSought notices• Reach out to primes• Submit first bids A structured 90-day path from unregistered to actively bidding
The Biz2Gov 90-day plan breaks entry into federal contracting into three phases: build the foundation (days 1–30), position and target (days 31–60), and build the pipeline and bid (days 61–90).

Phase 1 (Days 1–30): Build the Foundation

The goal of the first 30 days is to become federal-ready — discoverable, eligible, and able to respond. Nothing else matters until this is done.

1

Register in SAM.gov and get your UEI

Start immediately — activation takes about 10 business days. Registration is free. Have your legal business name and address matching your IRS and state records exactly to avoid entity validation delays.

2

Align your NAICS and PSC codes

Choose a primary NAICS code that matches your core work, plus 3–8 secondary codes. Confirm your small business size status under each. Identify the PSC codes for what you sell.

3

Optimize your SBA Small Business Search profile

This is how contracting officers find you during market research. Make it complete and keyword-rich — treat it as a marketing asset, not paperwork.

4

Build your capability statement

A one-page document with your core competencies, differentiators, past performance, codes, certifications, and contact information. This is the document behind every future agency conversation.

Trust note: SAM.gov registration is completely free through the official government website. You may choose to hire help to save time, but payment is never required to register or renew.

Phase 2 (Days 31–60): Position and Target

With the foundation set, the next 30 days are about focus: identifying who buys what you sell and getting on their radar. Random bidding wastes time; targeted positioning wins work.

5

Build a target agency list

Identify 5–10 agencies that regularly buy your services. Use award history on SAM.gov and USASpending.gov to see who is actually spending in your NAICS codes.

6

Research award history and incumbents

For each target agency, learn what they have bought, from whom, at what value, and when contracts expire. Expiring contracts are future opportunities you can prepare for early.

7

Contact OSDBU offices

Reach out to the small business specialists at your target agencies. This is the legitimate front door — introduce your business, share your capability statement, and ask how they prefer small vendors to engage.

8

Evaluate certifications and tailor your pitch

Determine which set-aside certifications you qualify for and begin any applications in parallel. Tailor your capability statement to each target agency's mission and needs.

Phase 3 (Days 61–90): Build the Pipeline and Bid

The final 30 days turn preparation into activity. By day 90 you should have a running pipeline and your first submissions in.

9

Set up SAM.gov saved searches

Create saved searches for your NAICS codes, PSC codes, target agencies, and set-aside types. Check them on a fixed weekly schedule so nothing expires unseen.

10

Build a bid/no-bid process

Not every opportunity is worth pursuing. A simple bid/no-bid scorecard keeps you focused on winnable work and prevents wasted proposals.

11

Respond to Sources Sought notices

These market research notices are your highest-leverage early activity — they get you on the agency's radar and can help turn an open competition into a small business set-aside.

12

Pursue subcontracting and submit first bids

Reach out to prime contractors for subcontracting opportunities (the fastest path to federal past performance) and submit your first compliant proposals on winnable opportunities.

Field Note — Former Contracting Officer Perspective

The single biggest predictor of whether a business succeeds in federal contracting is not size, capability, or certifications — it is whether someone owns the pipeline and touches it every week. The businesses that follow a structured 90-day plan and then keep a weekly cadence are the ones I saw win. The ones who registered and waited are the ones who concluded, wrongly, that “government contracting does not work.” The plan works. Working the plan is the hard part.

Realistic Timeline to Your First Federal Contract 1 3–6 MO Registered +early subcontracting 2 6–18 MO First primeaward possible 3 12–24 MO Larger awards,IDIQs & vehicles Day 90 gets you active — the first award follows with consistent pipeline work
What realistically follows day 90: registration and early subcontracting at 3–6 months, a first prime award possible at 6–18 months, and larger awards and vehicles at 12–24 months.

What Happens After Day 90

Ninety days gets you active — registered, positioned, and bidding. It does not typically get you a signed contract; realistic timelines to a first prime award are 6–18 months of consistent pipeline activity, with subcontracting often coming sooner. The 90-day plan is not the finish line. It is the on-ramp that puts you in the race.

The One Thing That Determines Success

After day 90, everything depends on consistency. A weekly pipeline review — checking saved searches, responding to Sources Sought, advancing agency relationships, and submitting bids — is what converts a foundation into contracts. Sporadic effort produces sporadic results.

Your 90-Day Plan at a Glance

  • Days 1–30: SAM registration + UEI, NAICS/PSC alignment, SBS optimization, capability statement
  • Days 31–60: target agency list, award research, OSDBU outreach, certification evaluation
  • Days 61–90: saved searches, bid/no-bid process, Sources Sought responses, subcontracting outreach, first bids
  • Day 91 onward: weekly pipeline review, sustained until first award (6–18 months)
Biz2Gov · Connect. Compete. Succeed.

Ready to Take Your First Step?

Biz2Gov helps small businesses go from unregistered to pipeline-ready in 90 days. Founded by former DoD Contracting Officer Bruce Ayres, we provide hands-on implementation — not just advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

A structured 90-day plan takes you from unregistered to actively bidding: days 1-30 build the foundation (SAM registration, NAICS alignment, capability statement), days 31-60 position and target agencies, and days 61-90 build a pipeline and submit first bids. A first prime contract award typically takes 6-18 months of consistent activity.
Focus on becoming federal-ready: register in SAM.gov and get your UEI (start immediately, activation takes about 10 business days), align your primary and secondary NAICS codes, optimize your SBA Small Business Search profile, and build a one-page capability statement.
Consistency. The biggest predictor of success is whether someone owns the pipeline and works it every week, checking saved searches, responding to Sources Sought notices, advancing agency relationships, and submitting bids. Businesses that register and then wait passively rarely win.
Usually not a signed contract. Ninety days gets you active: registered, positioned, and bidding. Realistic timelines to a first prime award are 6-18 months of consistent pipeline activity, though subcontracting opportunities can come sooner and build federal past performance faster.
No. You can complete the entire 90-day plan and pursue general small business set-asides without any certification. If you qualify for set-aside certifications like 8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, or SDVOSB, begin those applications in parallel during Phase 2, never as a blocker to starting.

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