Government contracting is high-pressure work. Pursuits are complex, deadlines are tight, and the stakes are huge. That environment naturally creates conflict.
It shows up everywhere:
If you’re in GovCon, conflict isn’t a “maybe.” It’s a constant. The question isn’t whether it will happen. The question is how you’ll respond.
Too often, leaders try to smooth things over or avoid difficult conversations. But avoiding conflict doesn’t make it go away. It only delays it and usually makes it worse.
In capture and proposals, avoidance can cost you:
Avoiding conflict doesn’t protect your P-Win. It undermines it.
Productive Conflict
Sometimes conflict exposes real gaps. Maybe your pricing strategy isn’t competitive. Maybe your solution is missing a key requirement. If so, face it. Productive conflict shines a light on weak spots you need to fix before the customer does.
Destructive Conflict (OPP - Other People’s Problems)
Other times, conflict is noise-ego, politics, or insecurity. Maybe a partner questions your contribution. Maybe an internal stakeholder resists change. That conflict isn’t about your capability. It’s about their problem. Recognize it for what it is.
Both types will appear in every major pursuit. Strong leaders know the difference.
Own What’s Real
If conflict reveals a skill gap or weak positioning, fix it. Don’t waste energy defending. Use it as an early warning system.
Don’t Absorb OPP
If conflict is driven by politics or insecurity, don’t internalize it. You control your response. Choose focus over frustration.
Use Conflict as a Signal
The moment you start winning-building customer intimacy, shaping requirements, gaining visibility-you’ll face pushback. Take it as proof you’re on the right track.
Keep the Team Aligned
In proposals, conflict often arises under deadline pressure. Reframe it: “We’re pushing because this matters.” Keep everyone anchored to the shared goal: a winning bid.
A mid-tier defense contractor once faced a critical internal conflict. Capture wanted to invest in customer engagement six months out. Finance pushed back, saying the spend was too risky. The debate got heated.
Instead of ignoring the conflict, leadership leaned in. They brought both teams together, reviewed P-Win, and reframed the conflict: “This isn’t about spend. It’s about positioning to win or lose a $200M contract.”
They invested. The team won. That conflict, reframed as a strategic choice, directly improved the outcome.
Conflict in GovCon is not a sign of failure. It’s proof you’re in the arena. Without conflict, there’s no chance to sharpen strategy, build resilience, or test your leadership.
Handled well, conflict:
Avoid it, and you weaken your position. Embrace it, and you grow stronger.
GovCon leaders don’t succeed by avoiding conflict. They succeed by reframing it. Every clash (internal or external) is a chance to grow, strengthen your team, and sharpen your competitive edge.
Conflict isn’t a threat to your success. It’s fuel for it.