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Post Award Procedures

Post award procedures in school procurement process

Post-Award Strategy for Kickoff, Reporting, and Sales Enablement

Winning an RFP is often treated as a finish line, but the award is the beginning of a new phase. A strong proposal opens the door; post-award discipline decides what happens once you walk through it. There is a host of SOPs, communications, and cross-departmental collaboration that must occur to maximize the award. 

Across high-performing companies, the approach is anchored in sales clear handoffs, data-rich reporting, internal alignment, and a willingness to view early implementation as the foundation for every renewal and expansion that follows. Their work reflects what Harvard Business Review often describes as the shift from “project execution” to “system-building,” which is premised on the recognition that long-term growth depends on how well teams connect information, people, and processes across the entire organization. This is a post-award guide that supports momentum and sales enablement. We encourage you to develop a customized set of SOPs tailored to your industry and organization to put these practical tips into practice.

Post-Award Playbook Framework

Proposal work demands speed, precision, and the ability to translate complex work into a narrative that evaluators can trust. Delivery work requires steadiness, consistency, and a deeper understanding of operational realities. When the award is announced, the organization must shift from one rhythm to another, and this cannot be done without scalable systems and successful cross-departmental collaboration. 

Proposal teams possess the history of the opportunity, which is often siloed, leaving sales reps lost or worse, getting on an implementation call unprepared and misinformed. RFP Teams have deep knowledge of what mattered to evaluators, which concerns surfaced during Q&A, which win themes resonated, and which features gave your solution an advantage. Implementation teams, however, often step into the relationship with limited visibility into that strategic context. There must be a strong communication plan in place, or awards will only turn into lost revenue. Upon receipt of an award notification, a sales hand-off form should be completed and sent to the applicable rep and sales manager. This form ideally lives in your CRM immediately and, in the future, as reps make new relationships and are alerted to existing contracts during their communication with a government agency.  Additionally, a request for a meeting with the procurement officer or award contact should be made. This will streamline the process and ensure everyone understands the nature of the award and the next steps. 

Research on organizational performance emphasizes that successful companies excel when information flows across functions without delay. In RFP environments, this means more than sharing a contract PDF. It means transferring the intent behind the work: the district’s concerns, the commitments your proposal made, and the nuances that shaped the award.

Integrating Sales, CRM, and Post-Award Intelligence

One of the most significant gaps in many post-award systems is the absence of a structured way to capture and distribute the intelligence gained during the procurement process. CEOs, sales leaders, and proposal teams often gather critical information—emerging partnerships, political dynamics, board concerns, upcoming initiatives—that never reach implementation, marketing, or future proposal writers.

Organizational strategy research in the Harvard Business Review frequently emphasizes that growth depends not on isolated insight but on how well that insight is shared. In RFP ecosystems, the CRM becomes the anchor for that shared learning.

CRM input should capture:

This information becomes a resource for marketing as they plan outreach to additional sites or departments. It informs sales teams as they identify opportunities for cross-selling or deeper engagement. It guides the implementation team as they anticipate risks or navigate district culture. It helps leadership understand where the contract fits within the district’s broader priorities.

A contract award is an opportunity to strengthen your presence, reputation, and impact across an entire region. When teams treat post-award work as a continuation of strategy using aligned implementation, CRM discipline, rigorous reporting, and intentional cross-team collaboration, they create a foundation that supports renewals, expansions, and future wins. They turn isolated awards into sustainable growth.

Post-Award Checklist

A quiet, disciplined framework for the first 30–90 days after a win.

The purpose of this checklist is to ensure that everything learned during the RFP process is transferred into implementation with clarity, consistency, and strategic intent. It reflects the practices of organizations that sustain long-term partnerships and convert awards into lasting growth.

1. Internal Handoff & Context Transfer

Distribute the full winning response, evaluation themes, and submitted attachments to the implementation, product, and leadership teams.

Document evaluator comments, Q&A insights, and the themes that shaped the award. This forms the foundation of strong reporting and stable delivery.

Identify any nonstandard commitments, implementation customizations, or specific conditions referenced during the proposal phase.

2. CRM & Knowledge Integration

Distribute the full winning response, evaluation themes, and submitted attachments to the implementation, product, and leadership teams.

Note related schools, feeder districts, cooperatives, or departments that showed interest. This guides future sales and marketing activity.

Identify additional steps needed before implementation (board approvals, IT/security reviews, data sharing agreements, or onboarding tasks).

3. Kickoff Planning

Hold a pre-kickoff internal briefing so every department understands the narrative, expectations, and scope before meeting the client.

Develop an agenda, roles, timelines, communication structures, and a brief restatement of the district’s goals and constraints.

Define meeting cadence, escalation pathways, shared workspaces, and primary points of contact.

4. Reporting Infrastructure

Identify what constitutes success and how it will be measured—before implementation begins.

Include quantitative data, narrative context, site-by-site observations, and alignment to district goals.

Set dates for monthly or quarterly reviews and confirm who receives which data and in what format.

5. Contract Compliance & Operations

Review deliverables, timelines, invoicing procedures, insurance, staffing commitments, and amendment processes.

Document deadlines for reports, site visits, onboarding activities, and data submissions.

Ensure team assignments, schedules, and onboarding plans align with the approved scope.

6. Relationship Stewardship

Clarify who asked strong questions, who expressed excitement, and who will influence expansion or renewal.

Send early check-ins, clarify meeting cadence preferences, and maintain transparency about challenges.

Capture positive moments, improvement indicators, and successful implementation milestones to support long-term relational trust.

7. Expansion & Renewal Readiness

Document evidence of improved outcomes, reduced burden, or positive staff feedback.

Share data and stories with district leaders and, when appropriate, in newsletters, case studies, or internal briefings.

Understand when the district begins budget planning and when renewal discussions need to start.

8. Internal Review Cycle

Identify gaps in handoffs, reporting, or communication and address them before they escalate.

Incorporate what was learned from the award into future RFP narratives, evidence modules, and alignment language.

Maintain direct collaboration between RFP, sales, implementation, product, and leadership so future work reflects real conditions on the ground.

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