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How Competitive Advantage Is Measured in Federal Contracting

9 minute read
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June 9, 2026

The Metrics Behind the SMA Competitiveness Index 

Federal contractors grow by winning competitive government programs, but winning alone does not fully explain how competitive advantage is measured in federal contracting. True competitive advantage emerges through repeated procurement outcomes that shape market position, customer relationships, and long-term capability development across federal markets.

Earlier papers in this series examined how competi­tive advantage develops through repeated procure­ments. Each competition shifts competitive position among the firms pursuing the same opportunity. Companies that win programs gain advantage while rivals pursuing the same work lose the opportunity.


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or download a PDF of this white paper here: How Competitive Advantage Is Measured in Federal Contracting


These outcomes do not occur in isolation. Federal agencies conduct thousands of procurements every year across mission areas, technology domains, and customer organizations. As these competitions accumulate over time, patterns of success and fail­ure begin to emerge across the marketplace.

Executives responsible for growth strategy there­fore face a fundamental question. How competitive is their organization relative to the firms pursuing the same work?

Traditional Metrics Do Not Fully Measure Competitiveness

Most companies attempt to answer that question using familiar indicators. Revenue growth, contract backlog, win rates, and new bookings appear regu­larly in corporate dashboards and analyst discus­sions. These measures provide useful insights into business performance.

Yet these indicators describe activity rather than competitiveness.

Revenue often reflects programs captured years ear­lier. Backlog represents work accumulated through past procurements. Win rates measure success within the limited set of opportunities that a company chooses to pursue.

Each of these indicators offers a partial view of per­formance. None of them reveal how companies per­form relative to competitors across the same set of procurements. Measuring competitiveness requires examining the outcomes of competitions them­selves.

This realization introduces a different way to think about federal markets.

Competitiveness Exists Relative to Other Firms

Competitiveness in federal contracting exists only in relation to other firms pursuing the same opportu­nities. Companies do not compete against the mar­ket in the abstract. They compete against specific rivals seeking the same government programs.

Understanding competitiveness therefore requires defining the environments where those competi­tions occur. The SMA Competitiveness Index evalu­ates competition within defined Market Arenas.

A Market Arena represents a set of procurements where companies pursue similar work within a shared mission area, technology domain, or customer environment. Firms operating in the same arena rely on related capabilities and encounter many of the same competitors. Defining these arenas allows competitiveness to be evaluated within the environ­ments where companies actually compete.

Within each Market Arena, companies pursue many individual procurements over time. Each procure­ment introduces a group of competitors pursuing the same program. The outcome of that competition shifts the competitive position among those partici­pants.

Understanding how that shift occurs requires exam­ining how competitions distribute opportunity.

Competitive Gain Explains Relative Advantage

At the beginning of a procurement, several compa­nies pursue the same program, and each competitor enters the competition with a potential path to vic­tory. The number of bidders and the structure of the award determine the expected probability of suc­cess for each participant. A competition with five bidders pursuing a single award, for example, gives each firm an expected probability of success of roughly one in five.

Actual outcomes rarely follow those probabilities.

When one company wins the program, it captures the full value of the award, while the remaining competitors receive none of the program despite making similar investments in pursuit of it. The dif­ference between expected probability and actual outcome represents competitive gain for the winner and competitive loss for the other bidders.

This concept introduces the idea of relative compet­itiveness.

Competitiveness reflects position among competi­tors pursuing the same work rather than perfor­mance in isolation. When one firm wins a procure­ment, it captures an advantage relative to the other bidders in that competition. Those competitors sim­ultaneously lose the opportunity despite investing similar effort in the pursuit. Competitive outcomes therefore shift position among rivals rather than cre­ating advantage independently.

The SMA Competitiveness Index measures these shifts in relative competitive position across repeated competitions within a Market Arena.

Example of Competitive Gain in Federal Contracting

A simple illustration clarifies how this works in prac­tice.

Consider a Market Arena where five companies com­pete across three procurements. Each firm possesses meaningful capabilities in that arena, and regularly pursues the same government programs.

The first competition involves a $250 million pro­gram with two awards and five bidders: companies A, B, C, D, and E. Two awards go to Company B for $150 million and Company D for $100 million. Be­cause five bidders competed for two awards, each firm began the competition with an expected share of $100 million.

Company B therefore achieved a competitive gain of $50 million by capturing $150 million instead of the expected $100 million. Company D captured the ex­pected share and recorded no competitive gain.

The second competition involves a $75 million pro­gram with three bidders: companies A, B, and C. Each competitor entered the competition with an expected share of $25 million. Company A won the award and achieved a competitive gain of $50 million.

The third competition involves a $75 million program with five bidders: companies A, B, C, D, and E. Each firm entered the competition with an expected share of $15 million. Company C won the award and achieved a competitive gain of $60 million.

At first glance many executives might assume Com­pany B demonstrates the strongest competitiveness because it secured the largest contract value. Eval­uating the competitions through competitive gain leads to a different conclusion.

Company C achieved the greatest competitive gain despite winning a smaller contract:

Company Contract Won Expected Share Competitive Gain
B $150M $100M +$50M
A $75M $25M +$50M
C $75M $15M +$60M

This example illustrates why competitiveness cannot rely solely on revenue or win rates. Competitive gain reveals how strongly a company outperformed rivals in a specific competition. When these gains accumu­late across procurements, they reveal patterns of competitive advantage across the market.

The SMA Competitiveness Index Measures Relative Performance

The SMA Competitiveness Index applies this logic across thousands of federal procurements. Rather than examining individual contract awards in isola­tion, the index evaluates competitive outcomes across defined Market Arenas. This approach allows competitiveness to be measured across repeated competitions involving the same groups of rivals.

To capture these dynamics, the index evaluates com­petitiveness through three complementary relative measures. Each metric measures a different dimen­sion of competitive performance within a Market Arena.

Competitive Market Share Won

Competitive Market Share Won measures the share of newly awarded program value captured by a com­pany within a Market Arena. This metric focuses on new contract awards rather than revenue generated from existing programs. Examining newly awarded work reveals which firms currently capture the larg­est portion of competitive opportunities.

Because this measure operates within a defined Market Arena, it evaluates share captured relative to the companies competing for the same work. Firms securing larger shares of new awards demonstrate a stronger competitive position within that arena.

Competitive Gain

Competitive Gain evaluates the advantage demon­strated in winning individual procurements. Each competition begins with an expected probability of success determined by the number of competitors and the structure of the award. Winning the program, therefore, produces a gain relative to those expected odds.

Competitions involving many capable bidders gen­erate larger gains because each participant begins the competition with lower probability of success. Smaller competitions yield smaller gains because each competitor starts with a higher chance of win­ning. Evaluating these outcomes across procure­ments reveals how strongly a company outperformed rivals in those competitions.

Relative Competitive Gain therefore serves as the primary indicator of competitive advantage within the SMA Competitiveness Index.

Award Volume

Award Volume measures the number of awards a company wins within a defined Market Arena. This metric focuses on the frequency of successful out­comes rather than the total value of awards. Exam­ining the number of awards won reveals how con­sistently a company succeeds across competitions, rather than highlighting performance driven by a small number of large program wins.

Companies that win a greater number of awards demonstrate more consistent competitive perfor­mance than their competitors in the same arena. Evaluating Award Volume alongside the other met­rics helps prevent companies with one or two major wins from having their overall competitiveness overstated, ensuring the Index reflects sustained competitive success rather than isolated victories.

Examining the Metrics Together

Examining these metrics together provides a clearer view of competitiveness. Competitive Market Share Won shows how much of the available opportunity a company captures. Competitive Gain reveals the strength of advantage demonstrated in individual procurements. Award Volume gives an idea of the consistency in competition performance.

Taken together, these measures reveal patterns that traditional metrics often obscure.

Some firms capture large revenue portfolios through a small number of major programs yet demonstrate weaker performance across repeated competitions. Other companies demonstrate strong competitive advantage across many procurements even when those wins do not immediately translate into large revenue portfolios.

These differences highlight the distinction between financial scale and competitive capability.

Strategic Implications for Federal Contractors

The SMA Competitiveness Index allows leaders to examine these dynamics across federal markets. Executives can observe how companies perform within defined Market Arenas and how competitive position evolves over time. This perspective reveals shifts in competitive momentum long before reve­nue rankings reflect those changes.

Understanding these patterns allows leadership teams to make better strategic decisions. Companies can identify arenas where they outperform compet­itors and markets where rivals demonstrate stronger competitive capability. These insights support more disciplined investment decisions, capture strategies, and market expansion efforts.

The next paper in this series examines what the Competitiveness Index reveals about the structure of federal markets and the companies that consist­ently outperform their competitors.

Explore the SMA Competitiveness Index

  • Visit the SMA Competitiveness Index interactive platform to explore competitive performance across federal markets, compare companies, and access the research behind the index.
  • Start exploring the data. Discover what the index reveals about your organization’s compet­itive position.
  • Organizations seeking deeper insight can also engage SMA to apply the Competitiveness In­dex to their markets, portfolios, and growth strategies.
Posted on June 9, 2026, by Tawnia Luong, SMA, Inc.