Prompt:
You are an elite Government Contract Research Analyst, Capture Manager, Procurement Strategist, Proposal Intelligence Specialist, Public Sector Consultant, Competitive Intelligence Researcher, and Winning Proposal Advisor.
Your task is to perform EXTENSIVE RESEARCH using the information listed below, all uploaded proposal documents, procurement links, attachments, agency websites, public records, news articles, budgets, strategic plans, procurement history, and external research sources.
The purpose of this research is to uncover ALL possible background intelligence, strategic insights, agency priorities, hidden needs, procurement patterns, competitive advantages, political considerations, operational pain points, incumbent positioning, evaluation behavior, and decision-making factors that can later be used to draft a highly competitive, compliant, persuasive, and winning proposal response.
The final output should function as a COMPLETE PROPOSAL INTELLIGENCE DOSSIER and strategic capture report.
The research should go FAR BEYOND simply summarizing the RFP.
Bid Proposal Link: https://emma.maryland.gov/page.aspx/en/bpm/process_manage_extranet/91292
The goal is to deeply understand:
- The agency
- The decision-makers
- The procurement environment
- The operational problems
- The political and financial context
- The likely competitors
- The incumbent vendor
- The evaluator mindset
- The hidden priorities behind the solicitation
- The language and positioning most likely to win
The final intelligence report should provide EVERYTHING needed to later create a proposal that stands out from competitors and maximizes the chances of winning the contract.
PRIMARY RESEARCH OBJECTIVES
- Understand WHY this RFP/RFQ/grant exists.
- Identify the agency’s true operational pain points.
- Understand the agency’s strategic priorities.
- Research procurement history and prior awards.
- Identify incumbents and likely competitors.
- Research budgets, funding sources, and spending patterns.
- Identify evaluator priorities and likely scoring behavior.
- Understand political, public, operational, and financial pressures.
- Discover language, messaging, and positioning that will resonate most.
- Build a strategic intelligence profile for proposal development.
RESEARCH REQUIREMENTS
Perform deep research using:
- Agency websites
- Procurement portals
- State procurement databases
- Public budgets
- Annual reports
- Strategic plans
- Audit reports
- Inspector General reports
- Legislative documents
- Press releases
- News articles
- Vendor award histories
- LinkedIn/company research
- Public meeting minutes
- City/state council agendas
- Board meeting notes
- Economic reports
- Grant funding announcements
- Prior solicitation documents
- Competitor websites
- Incumbent vendor information
- Public contract databases
- Procurement forecasts
- Government transparency portals
- Freedom of Information/public records if applicable
- Industry benchmarks
- Public complaints/issues involving the agency
- Social media/public statements by leadership
REQUIRED OUTPUT FORMAT
SECTION 1 — OPPORTUNITY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARY
Provide:
- Proposal title
- Agency/entity
- State/location
- Procurement type
- Estimated value
- Funding source
- Department/division issuing proposal
- Summary of the opportunity
- What the agency is truly trying to accomplish
- Why this contract likely exists now
- What operational problem the agency is trying to solve
Also provide:
- “The Bigger Picture Behind This Solicitation”
- “What Success Likely Looks Like to the Agency”
- “What Failure the Agency Is Trying to Avoid”
SECTION 2 — AGENCY BACKGROUND RESEARCH
Research and summarize:
- Agency mission
- Strategic priorities
- Leadership structure
- Current initiatives
- Public challenges/issues
- Technology environment
- Budget constraints
- Political pressures
- Staffing shortages
- Operational bottlenecks
- Service delivery problems
- Public complaints/issues
- Recent news/events
- Digital transformation initiatives
- DEI/small business goals
- Sustainability/environmental goals
- Economic or legislative pressures
Also identify:
- Recent modernization efforts
- Current vendor frustrations
- Agency culture and communication style
- Public image concerns
SECTION 3 — PROCUREMENT HISTORY & CONTRACT INTELLIGENCE
Research:
- Previous versions of this solicitation
- Prior awarded vendors
- Contract award amounts
- Incumbent contractors
- Renewal history
- Procurement cycles
- Historical pricing
- Historical scoring/evaluation patterns
- Past protest actions
- Amendments/addenda trends
- Procurement delays/issues
Identify:
- Why the incumbent may lose
- Weaknesses in prior contracts
- Areas where the agency may want improvement
- Vendor churn patterns
- Procurement trends over multiple years
Also provide:
- “Likely Reasons This Contract Was Re-Bid”
SECTION 4 — COMPETITOR & INCUMBENT ANALYSIS
Research likely competitors including:
- Incumbent vendor
- Top regional vendors
- National competitors
- Small business competitors
- Minority-owned competitors
- Existing government contractors in this sector
For each likely competitor analyze:
- Strengths
- Weaknesses
- Certifications
- Government experience
- Pricing positioning
- Market reputation
- Technology advantages
- Service gaps
- Public reviews/issues if available
Then provide:
- Competitive positioning strategy
- Ways to differentiate
- Weaknesses competitors may overlook
- Areas where competitors likely underperform
Also provide:
- “How To Position This Proposal To Beat Competitors”
SECTION 5 — DECISION-MAKER & EVALUATOR INTELLIGENCE
Research:
- Procurement officers
- Department leadership
- Program managers
- Technical evaluators
- Public statements
- Leadership priorities
- Communication style
- Strategic initiatives
- Recent speeches/interviews
- Political priorities
- Technology priorities
- Cost reduction goals
- Operational efficiency goals
Identify:
- What evaluators likely care about most
- Risk factors evaluators fear
- Language that will resonate most
- What will build trust fastest
Also provide:
- “What Evaluators Secretly Want To Hear”
- “What Will Make Evaluators Feel Safe Choosing This Vendor”
SECTION 6 — FINANCIAL & BUDGET INTELLIGENCE
Research:
- Agency budget reports
- Funding allocations
- Grant funding
- Federal/state funding sources
- Budget increases/decreases
- Emergency funding
- Procurement spending trends
- Cost reduction initiatives
Analyze:
- Budget pressure
- Spending behavior
- Financial risk tolerance
- Pricing sensitivity
- Cost justification concerns
Also identify:
- Whether low-cost or best-value is more important
- Whether innovation or reliability matters more
- Budget flexibility indicators
SECTION 7 — OPERATIONAL PAIN POINT ANALYSIS
Identify likely operational problems including:
- Staffing shortages
- Delayed service delivery
- Outdated technology
- Poor reporting systems
- Data management issues
- Vendor management issues
- Compliance concerns
- Public dissatisfaction
- Workflow inefficiencies
- Communication problems
- Budget inefficiencies
- Manual processes
- Scalability issues
Then provide:
- Recommended proposal positioning
- Messaging that addresses pain points
- Solution themes that directly solve operational issues
SECTION 8 — STRATEGIC WIN THEMES
Create:
- Top 5-10 strategic win themes
- Emotional trust-building themes
- Risk-reduction messaging
- Reliability messaging
- Innovation messaging
- Cost-efficiency messaging
- Compliance-focused messaging
Also generate:
- Suggested executive summary angles
- Suggested differentiators
- Suggested proof points
- Suggested graphics/data points to include
- Suggested customer success narratives
SECTION 9 — PROPOSAL POSITIONING STRATEGY
Develop:
- Ideal proposal tone/style
- Suggested narrative structure
- Persuasive messaging strategy
- Compliance-first positioning
- Innovation positioning
- Risk mitigation positioning
- Value proposition strategy
- Best-value justification strategy
- How we can win this bid (suggestions)
Also provide:
- Suggested language to use throughout proposal
- Words/phrases likely to resonate
- Words/phrases to avoid
- Suggested proposal themes and slogans
SECTION 10 — HIGH-VALUE RESEARCH FINDINGS
Identify:
- Hidden opportunities
- Unspoken agency concerns
- Political sensitivities
- Recent public criticism/issues
- Potential procurement weaknesses
- Vendor dissatisfaction indicators
- Internal agency pressures
- Legislative priorities
- Economic development goals
- Community impact priorities
Also identify:
- Anything competitors may overlook
- “Hidden leverage points” that could improve proposal strength
SECTION 11 — PROPOSAL CONTENT RECOMMENDATIONS
Provide recommendations for:
- Executive Summary
- Technical Approach
- Methodology
- Staffing Plan
- Project Management
- Transition Plan
- Reporting Plan
- QA/QC Plan
- Risk Management Plan
- Innovation Section
- DEI/Supplier Diversity Section
- Sustainability Section
- Pricing Narrative
Also recommend:
- Charts
- Graphics
- Tables
- Visual storytelling ideas
- Case study structure
- Resume strategy
- Past performance strategy
SECTION 12 — QUESTIONS THAT SHOULD BE INVESTIGATED FURTHER
Generate:
- Clarification questions
- Strategic research gaps
- Missing intelligence
- Questions for subcontractors/partners
- Questions for agency contacts
- Competitive intelligence questions
SECTION 13 — FINAL STRATEGIC RECOMMENDATION
Provide:
- Overall win probability assessment
- Recommended bid/no-bid analysis
- Proposal strengths to emphasize
- Biggest competitive threats
- Greatest risks
- Most important differentiators
- Most persuasive positioning strategy
- Recommended next actions
Also include:
- “Top 10 Things Most Likely To Win This Contract”
ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS
- Think like a high-level capture manager and proposal strategist.
- Go beyond surface-level research.
- Connect patterns across documents and public data.
- Identify hidden motivations behind the solicitation.
- Explain research findings in plain English.
- Prioritize strategic intelligence over generic summaries.
- Flag anything that could impact win probability.
- Identify political, operational, budgetary, and reputational drivers.
- Assume the final proposal must outperform experienced competitors.
- Focus heavily on evaluator psychology and procurement behavior.
- Identify what creates trust and reduces perceived risk.
- Look for ways to align the proposal with agency mission and priorities.
- Think critically about why the agency issued this solicitation now.
FINAL OUTPUT REQUIREMENTS
The final report should:
- Be extremely detailed
- Be professionally organized
- Be strategy-focused
- Be proposal-writer ready
- Be executive-level quality
- Include tables/checklists where helpful
- Include actionable recommendations
- Focus heavily on winning strategy
- Provide intelligence that competitors may overlook
The goal is to create the ultimate proposal intelligence and capture strategy report that can later be used to draft a highly competitive, compliant, persuasive, and winning government proposal response.
Proposal Information:
MARYLAND AVIATION ADMINISTRATION
OFFICE OF PROCUREMENT AND MATERIALS MANAGEMENT
ADDENDUM No. 2
to
DRAWINGS
for
CONTRACT NO.: MAA-CO-26-008
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL TOWER REFURBISHMENT
AT
BALTIMORE/WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL THURGOOD MARSHALL AIRPORT
(dated) MARCH 31, 2026
IMPORTANT: Bidders must acknowledge receipt of this Addendum. Please sign and date the
attached “Acknowledgement of Receipt”. All documents must be fully executed at the time the
Bid is submitted. All information contained herein shall form a part of this Addendum.
The MAA encourages Contractors to return the Addendum Acknowledgement attached to this
Addendum No. 2.
This Addendum forms a part of the Contract Documents and modifies the original Bidding
Documents dated March 31, 2026.
This Addendum No. 2 consists of 2 pages, the following attachments and revisions:
- Attachment No. 1 – Addendum No. 2 Acknowledgement Form
Addendum Date: May 7, 2026
Bid Due Date: May 13, 2025; 2:00:00 p.m. local time
REVISED BID DUE DATE: May 20, 2026; 2:00:00 p.m. local time
Bids Delivered to: Bids must be submitted via eMMA:
https://emma.maryland.gov
Bid Opening: May 20, 2026; 2:05:00 p.m. local time
Bid Opening Location: via eMAA https://emma.maryland.gov via BPM056208
GI-1.03 Basis of Contract Award
The Maryland Aviation Administration will award this Contract to the responsible Bidder with the lowest
responsive bid based on the Total Base Bid and any combination of Add or Deduct Alternates included
in the Contract Documents, whichever is in the best interest of the State.
The apparent low bidder must provide a Schedule of Values in accordance with SP-2.02, Paragraph D.
NOTE: Failure to comply with any bidding instructions will be a basis for rejection as a non-responsive
bid.
GI-1.04 Description of Project
The work under this Contract is comprised of the following items:
A. The work under this contract includes addressing deficiencies related to current applicable codes
and standards within the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) leased area in the Air Traffic
Control Tower (ATCT) at BWI Marshall. The restoration effort has been explicitly categorized
by MAA into five (5) elements: MAA Electrical Compliance, Fire Suppression Compliance, Fire
Separation Compliance, ADA Compliance, and Lease Required Amenities & Facility Upgrades.
All work shall be completed in accordance with the contract drawing and specifications; all
applicable codes, plans, sketches, and other Contract Documents; and any addenda thereto, at
locations designated by the Engineer.
GI-1.05 Special Construction Requirements
A. Phasing
Contractor shall follow the construction phases as shown on the contract drawings. As required
by the Standard Provisions, the Contractor is required to submit a fully detailed schedule for the
entire work that shall include all milestones and tasks required to complete the milestones. The
entire work that shall include all milestones and tasks required to complete the milestones. The
Contractor’s proposed construction schedule must be approved per SP-8 before Notice to
Proceed (NTP) is issued.
B. Time Restrictions
Time restrictions are indicated on the Drawings. Time restrictions are subject to change as
required to accommodate airline, tenant, FAA, TSA and airport operations.