A Source Selection Plan (SSP) is the government's internal document establishing the evaluation methodology, team composition, rating criteria, and procedures for a negotiated acquisition. Not disclosed to offerors — only the evaluation factors and their relative importance (from Section M) are shared.
is a process concept federal contractors and grant writers run into across solicitations, regulations, and award filings
Source Selection Plan is a step or workflow in the federal-procurement lifecycle. Knowing where Source Selection Plan fits in the larger acquisition arc — from market research through award through performance — helps contractors time their engagement, identify the right contracting officials, and avoid showing up too late to influence the requirement. Many proposal failures trace back to misunderstanding when Source Selection Plan occurs, who owns it, and what artifacts it produces. The related terms above name the adjacent process steps that most commonly precede or follow Source Selection Plan, and tracking those transitions over time is one of the more reliable ways to build pipeline visibility ahead of formal solicitations.
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