How to Respond to Sources Sought Notices (And Why You Should)

How to Respond to Sources Sought Notices (And Why You Should)
Most government contractors focus their business development energy on solicitations: RFPs, RFQs, and IFBs that request formal proposals. But by the time a solicitation is published, the critical decisions about procurement strategy, including whether the contract will be set aside for small businesses, have already been made. The window of maximum influence is not the solicitation; it is the sources sought notice that comes before it.
A sources sought notice is the government's way of asking the market: "Who can do this work?" Your response tells the contracting officer that your company exists, is capable, and is interested. More importantly, when enough qualified small businesses respond, the contracting officer has the evidence needed to justify a small business set-aside under the Rule of Two, transforming a full-and-open competition into a set-aside with dramatically reduced competition.
Despite their importance, many contractors ignore sources sought notices because they do not result in immediate contract awards. This is a strategic mistake. This guide explains what sources sought notices are, why responding is one of the highest-ROI business development activities in government contracting, and provides a ready-to-use response template.
What Is a Sources Sought Notice?
A sources sought notice (also called a Sources Sought Synopsis, Request for Information, or Request for Capability Statements) is a market research tool that federal agencies publish on SAM.gov before issuing a formal solicitation. The notice describes a future requirement and asks the market to provide information about their capability to perform the work.
Sources sought notices are governed by FAR Part 10 (Market Research), which requires agencies to conduct market research to determine whether commercial products or services are available, identify potential sources, and determine the appropriate procurement strategy.
What a Sources Sought Notice Is NOT
- It is not a solicitation. You cannot win a contract by responding.
- It is not a request for proposals or pricing. Do not submit a detailed proposal or cost breakdown.
- It does not obligate the government to issue a solicitation or award a contract.
- It does not guarantee that your company will be considered for the eventual solicitation.
What a Sources Sought Notice IS
- A market research tool to identify capable vendors.
- An opportunity to influence the acquisition strategy (set-aside decisions, NAICS code, requirements).
- A chance to establish your company with the acquisition team before the formal competition.
- Evidence for the contracting officer to justify a set-aside under the Rule of Two.
The Rule of Two: Why Your Response Matters
The Rule of Two is the legal standard that determines whether a contract should be set aside for small businesses. Under FAR 19.502-2, a contracting officer must set aside a procurement for small business participation when there is a reasonable expectation that:
- At least two responsible small business concerns will submit offers; AND
- Award will be made at a fair and reasonable price.
Sources sought responses are the primary evidence contracting officers use to evaluate whether the Rule of Two is satisfied. Here is the direct relationship:
- If two or more capable small businesses respond to a sources sought notice, the contracting officer has evidence to support a small business set-aside.
- If fewer than two small businesses respond, the contracting officer may proceed with full-and-open competition, meaning you face large business competitors.
This means your sources sought response does not just benefit you; it benefits every small business in your industry. And if the contract is set aside for a specific certification category (8(a), SDVOSB, HUBZone, WOSB), the competitive field shrinks even further.
What Sources Sought Notices Typically Ask For
While each notice is different, most sources sought notices request some or all of the following:
Company Information
- Business name, address, and point of contact
- UEI number and CAGE code
- Business size (small or large under the specified NAICS code)
- Socioeconomic certifications (8(a), SDVOSB, HUBZone, WOSB)
- Primary NAICS code(s)
Capability Information
- Description of relevant experience and past performance
- Technical capabilities related to the requirement
- Key personnel qualifications
- Facilities, equipment, or clearances relevant to the work
- Geographic coverage or place of performance capabilities
Specific Questions
Many notices include specific questions the agency wants answered:
- Can your company perform this work independently or would you need a teaming partner?
- What is your experience with similar requirements?
- What NAICS code do you believe is appropriate for this work?
- Do you hold any relevant contract vehicles (GSA Schedule, GWACs)?
- Can you meet the specified delivery/performance timeline?
How to Write an Effective Sources Sought Response
Principles
Answer every question. The notice will list specific information the agency wants. Address every item explicitly.
Be specific, not generic. Do not submit your standard marketing materials. Tailor your response to the specific requirement described in the notice.
Demonstrate capability, not aspiration. Show that you have done similar work, not that you could hypothetically do it. Cite specific contracts, metrics, and outcomes.
Keep it concise. Sources sought responses should be focused and professional. Follow any page limits specified in the notice. If no limit is given, aim for 3 to 5 pages plus your capability statement.
Include your certifications. Clearly state your small business status and all socioeconomic certifications. This information directly affects the set-aside determination.
Sources Sought Response Template
Use this template as a starting framework. Customize it for each specific notice.
[Company Letterhead]
Date: [Date]
To: [Contracting Officer Name and Agency]
Subject: Sources Sought Response -- [Notice Title and Solicitation Number]
1. Company Overview
[Company Name] is a [small business type, e.g., SBA-certified 8(a), SDVOSB] headquartered in [City, State]. We have been providing [type of services/products] to federal, state, and commercial clients since [year].
- UEI: [Your UEI]
- CAGE Code: [Your CAGE Code]
- Primary NAICS: [Code and description]
- Business Size: Small under NAICS [assigned NAICS code]
- Certifications: [List: 8(a), SDVOSB, HUBZone, WOSB, etc.]
- Contract Vehicles: [GSA Schedule number, GWAC positions, etc.]
2. Relevant Experience and Past Performance
[Company Name] has successfully performed work directly relevant to this requirement. Below are representative contracts:
Contract 1:
- Client: [Agency/Organization]
- Contract Number: [Number]
- Value: [$Amount]
- Period: [Start -- End]
- Scope: [Brief description of work performed]
- Relevance: [How this work relates to the sources sought requirement]
Contract 2:
- Client: [Agency/Organization]
- Contract Number: [Number]
- Value: [$Amount]
- Period: [Start -- End]
- Scope: [Brief description]
- Relevance: [Relevance explanation]
Contract 3:
- Client: [Agency/Organization]
- Contract Number: [Number]
- Value: [$Amount]
- Period: [Start -- End]
- Scope: [Brief description]
- Relevance: [Relevance explanation]
3. Technical Capabilities
[Describe your capabilities as they relate to the specific requirements outlined in the sources sought notice. Address each major requirement area.]
[Company Name] maintains the following capabilities relevant to this requirement:
- [Capability 1: Specific to requirement]
- [Capability 2: Specific to requirement]
- [Capability 3: Specific to requirement]
- [Capability 4: Specific to requirement]
4. Key Personnel
[List key personnel who would support this requirement, with relevant qualifications.]
- [Name], [Title]: [Brief qualifications and relevant experience]
- [Name], [Title]: [Brief qualifications and relevant experience]
5. Responses to Specific Questions
[Address each question asked in the sources sought notice individually.]
Question 1: [Repeat the question] Response: [Your answer]
Question 2: [Repeat the question] Response: [Your answer]
6. Conclusion
[Company Name] has the experience, technical capability, and resources to successfully perform this requirement. We are interested in the upcoming solicitation and prepared to submit a competitive proposal.
For additional information, please contact:
[Name] [Title] [Email] [Phone]
Attachment: Capability Statement
Strategic Uses of Sources Sought Responses
Influence Set-Aside Decisions
Your response is evidence for the Rule of Two. Specifically highlight your small business certifications and make a case for why a set-aside is appropriate:
"[Company Name] is an SBA-certified SDVOSB firm with direct experience performing this type of work. We are aware of at least two additional SDVOSB firms with similar capabilities, supporting a potential SDVOSB set-aside for this requirement."
Suggest the Right NAICS Code
If the notice asks for NAICS code input, or if you believe a different NAICS code is more appropriate, state your recommendation with justification:
"Based on the scope described, we recommend NAICS 541512 (Computer Systems Design Services) with a size standard of $34 million, which more accurately reflects the principal purpose of this requirement than the currently assigned NAICS 541519."
Shape Requirements
Some notices invite feedback on the draft statement of work or requirements. Use this opportunity to suggest modifications that play to your strengths, provided your suggestions genuinely improve the requirement:
"We recommend the agency consider requiring contractor personnel to hold [specific certification], which ensures the quality of personnel performing this work and aligns with industry best practices."
Build Pre-Solicitation Relationships
After submitting your response, follow up with the contracting officer (if appropriate). Attend any related industry days or pre-solicitation conferences. Your sources sought response establishes you as an interested, capable party.
Finding Sources Sought Notices
SAM.gov
Sources sought notices are posted on SAM.gov under Contract Opportunities with the notice type "Sources Sought" or "Special Notice." Filter by:
- Notice type: Sources Sought
- NAICS code
- Agency
- Keyword
- Set-aside type
SamSearch
SamSearch's Contract Search aggregates sources sought notices with other opportunity types, making it easier to find relevant notices across all agencies. Set up alerts for your NAICS codes to receive notifications when new sources sought notices are posted.
Agency Forecast Cross-Reference
Cross-reference sources sought notices with agency procurement forecasts. If an agency's forecast lists an upcoming requirement and a sources sought notice appears for that requirement, it signals that the procurement is moving forward and your response is timely.
Common Mistakes
Not responding. The biggest mistake is ignoring sources sought notices. Every non-response is a missed opportunity to influence the acquisition strategy and put your company in front of the buying agency.
Submitting generic materials. Sending your standard capability statement without addressing the specific requirement demonstrates lack of attention and adds little value to the agency's market research.
Treating it like a proposal. Sources sought responses should not include detailed pricing, lengthy technical volumes, or formal proposal formatting. Keep it focused on demonstrating capability.
Responding late. Sources sought notices have response deadlines. Late responses may not be reviewed. Monitor SAM.gov and SamSearch daily.
Not following up. After submitting your response, monitor SAM.gov for the eventual solicitation. Attend any related industry events. Your sources sought response opens the door; you must walk through it.
Measuring ROI of Sources Sought Responses
Track these metrics to evaluate the effectiveness of your sources sought response strategy:
- Response-to-solicitation conversion rate. How many sources sought notices you responded to resulted in solicitations?
- Set-aside wins. How many solicitations resulting from your sources sought responses were set aside for your certification category?
- Proposal invitations. Were you specifically invited to submit proposals based on your sources sought response?
- Win rate. Is your win rate higher on solicitations where you previously responded to the sources sought notice?
Over time, you should see a correlation between sources sought engagement and improved win rates. Companies that engage early win more often.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a sources sought notice?
A sources sought notice is a market research tool federal agencies use to identify potential vendors before issuing a formal solicitation. It asks businesses to demonstrate their capability to perform a described requirement, helping the agency develop its procurement strategy.
Is a sources sought notice the same as an RFP?
No. A sources sought notice is a market research request, not a solicitation. You cannot win a contract by responding. However, your response influences the acquisition strategy, including whether the contract is set aside for small businesses.
Why should I respond to sources sought notices?
Your response establishes the competitive base for the Rule of Two (justifying small business set-asides), puts your company in front of the acquisition team, helps shape requirements, and positions you as a known, capable vendor before the formal competition.
What is the Rule of Two?
The Rule of Two requires contracting officers to set aside procurements for small businesses when at least two capable small businesses are expected to submit competitive offers at fair prices. Sources sought responses provide the evidence for this determination.
What should I include in a sources sought response?
Include your company overview, UEI/CAGE, certifications, relevant past performance (2-3 contracts), technical capabilities aligned with the requirement, key personnel, and answers to every specific question in the notice. Attach your capability statement.
How long should a sources sought response be?
Follow any page limits in the notice. If none are specified, aim for 3 to 5 pages plus your capability statement. Be concise and relevant; focus on demonstrating specific capability rather than providing generic company information.
Can my sources sought response affect the final solicitation?
Yes. Your response can influence the set-aside determination, NAICS code selection, scope of work, evaluation criteria, and contract type. Agencies use market research responses to refine their acquisition approach.
How do I find sources sought notices?
Sources sought notices are posted on SAM.gov under Contract Opportunities with the notice type "Sources Sought." Use SamSearch to filter by NAICS code, agency, and keyword, and set up alerts to be notified when relevant notices are posted.
Next Steps
Start monitoring sources sought notices today. Set up alerts on SamSearch for your NAICS codes and target agencies. When relevant notices appear, respond within the deadline using the template above, customized for the specific requirement.
Make sources sought responses a standard part of your business development workflow. The time investment is small (2-4 hours per response), but the strategic impact of influencing set-aside decisions and building agency awareness is substantial.
For more on finding opportunities, see our Finding Government Contracts Guide. For building your capability statement to attach to responses, see our Capability Statement Guide.







