30 RACEprompt prompts. For federal AI work that does not sound like everyone else's.
One-time price. Built on the RACE framework. Imports straight into RACEprompt or runs in any LLM. No vendor lock-in.
30 prompts. 6 federal verticals. One framework.
Each prompt is 8 to 15 lines. Each one assumes you know federal terminology already, and asks you for the specifics that make the output usable. No placeholder junk like "[insert agency name]". You bring context, the structure handles the rest.
Capture Management
Opportunity screening, teaming math, BD pipeline scoring, gate review prep, decision memos.
Proposal Writing
Executive summary, technical volume scaffolds, past performance pull, win-theme synthesis, FAR clause crosswalks.
SBIR / STTR
Topic alignment, Phase A narrative, technical objectives, commercialization plan, Phase B transition story.
Compliance and Risk
FAR / DFARS clause analyzer, NIST AI RMF crosswalk, FedRAMP gap notes, ITAR posture, ATO readiness checklist.
Federal AI Productivity
Meeting compression, RFP teardown, stakeholder briefings, status memo generator, weekly program note.
Pricing and Cost
BOE generator, price-to-win checks, cost narrative, fee strategy framing.
Sample, not the full pack.
These three give you the shape. The other 27 follow the same structure, tuned to their vertical. Run them against Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or any model that handles long context.
Opportunity Screening
ROLE: You are a federal capture lead with 15 years of experience screening opportunities for a small business prime. You decide which solicitations are worth a proposal investment and which to no-bid. ACTION: Score this opportunity on five axes: customer fit, technical fit, incumbent risk, price-to-win pressure, and small business advantage. Return a 0 to 5 score per axis with a one-sentence rationale, an overall go / no-go recommendation, and three follow-on questions I should answer before committing capture dollars. CONTEXT: Solicitation: [paste solicitation number, agency, scope summary] My company: [size, NAICS, primary capabilities, last 3 customers] Incumbent (if known): [name and contract value] Small business set-aside type: [8(a) / WOSB / SDVOSB / HUBZone / none] EXPECTATIONS: Output is a single page. No filler. Score table first, then rationale, then go / no-go in bold, then questions. Use numbers wherever possible. Skip pleasantries.
FAR Clause Analyzer
ROLE: You are a federal compliance analyst with deep FAR / DFARS fluency. You read solicitations and surface clause-level risks the proposal team needs to flag to legal before pen-down. ACTION: Read the clause list below. For each clause, return: a one-line plain-English meaning, the obligation it creates on the contractor, the typical risk pattern, and a green / yellow / red flag based on my company profile. End with the top three clauses my legal team must review first. CONTEXT: Clause list: [paste clauses, e.g. 52.204-21, 52.227-14, 252.204-7012] My company profile: [size, current CMMC level, FedRAMP status, ITAR registered yes/no] Period of performance: [months] Total estimated value: [dollars] EXPECTATIONS: Output is a single table sorted by risk flag, red first. No legal advice language. No hedging. If a clause does not apply given my profile, mark N/A and move on.
RFP Teardown
ROLE: You are a senior proposal manager teardown specialist. Given a solicitation, you produce a teardown that the capture lead can hand to the proposal team in under 10 minutes. ACTION: Produce a teardown with: scope summary in 5 bullets, evaluation criteria with weights, mandatory submission elements, page limits and formatting rules, key risks, and three early questions for the contracting officer. CONTEXT: Solicitation: [paste solicitation text or attach link] Customer agency: [agency, sub-component] Our role: [prime / sub / open] EXPECTATIONS: Output is structured for paste into a Confluence page. Use H2 / H3, not prose. Skip cover sheet. Page limits go first because they drive everything else. Flag every word like "shall" and "must" in the SOW.
Why structure beats free-form.
RACE is Role, Action, Context, Expectations. It is the structure that turns a free-form chat with an LLM into a repeatable workflow. Without it, you spend three hours iterating on tone. With it, you get usable output in 15 minutes.
These prompts are built on the same framework that powers RACEprompt, the app used by federal employees and contractors today. The library imports as JSON straight into the app, or runs as plain Markdown anywhere.
See the consulting tier if you want help wiring this into a team workflow, not just running it solo.
One-time price. Yours forever.
The Founding Year Bundle is the recommended entry. It includes this Federal Procurement pack plus four additional vertical packs that ship through 2026. Single-pack pricing also available on Gumroad.
- Federal Procurement pack (this one), 30 prompts, ships now
- Four additional vertical packs through 2026 as they release
- Markdown plus JSON plus PDF, all formats
- RACE framework primer included
- 3 fully rendered sample outputs to ground your first run
- 14-day money-back refund
What buyers say.
This pack ships fresh. Reviews land here as buyers come back. The framework itself is in production use across 50K+ RACEprompt downloads, federal contractors, and AI program teams.
Want help wiring this into your capture workflow?
The pack runs solo. If you want a working prototype that pipes these prompts into your capture or proposal stack, the Prototype Sprint is the right next step.
See Prototype Sprint