Thought Leadership
The Post-Pursuit Debrief:
How to Learn from Every Proposal You Lose
By Alicia Darrow and Cass Moore
If a lost pursuit doesn’t change how the next one is approached, the loss was wasted.
Most organizations move on too quickly. The next pursuit takes over, timelines compress, and the loss gets explained away, close scoring, a preferred competitor, a tough call. Maybe all of that is true. None of it changes what happens next.
A structured debrief does.
What a debrief is
It is a structured conversation with the right people in the room, designed to extract specific, actionable intelligence from a pursuit that did not go your way. Not a post-mortem. Not a blame session. It has two parts: an internal debrief and, when possible a client debrief. Each serves a different purpose. Both matter.
The internal debrief
Run the debrief within two weeks of a loss, while the pursuit is still fresh. Focus the conversation on what will change future outcomes.
That last question carries the most weight. The debrief is not about the proposal. It is about what changes before the next one begins.
The client debrief
Request it. Most organizations do not. Many evaluators will agree to a brief conversation, especially if the pursuit was competitive and the relationship was professional.
When the opportunity is there, use it well. Do not defend or explain. Instead ask and listen.
Even partial feedback is useful. A comment about stronger alignment with constraints signals that the proposal lacked specificity, regardless of how it was perceived internally.
What changes as a result
Organizations that improve win rates treat debriefs as a standard practice, not a response to major losses.
Over time, the impact is visible:
None of this comes from a general intent to improve. It comes from specific insight, consistently applied.
The debrief is where the loss becomes an asset.