Live federal data
Stop losing federal cleaning contracts you could have won.
Every week I send you the expiring federal janitorial contracts in Texas: who holds them, what they are worth, when they come up for rebid. The weekly issue is free.
70 contracts worth $89.4M are coming up for rebid in Texas right now.
Built on official federal contract records. Every number is machine-verified against the source before it goes out. No estimates, no scraping, no guesswork.
How it works
I watch the data.
Daily pull of every federal award and solicitation in NAICS 561720 (that's commercial cleaning). The whole country, every day.
I flag the rebids.
Contracts ending soon get pulled out and ranked. That's your recompete window: the months before a contract goes back out to bid.
You get one short email.
Once a week, Texas only. Who won last week, and what's coming. You read it in about 60 seconds.
Right now in the data
Texas
70
expiring contracts
$89.4M in play
Florida
43
expiring contracts
$16.0M in play
California
78
expiring contracts
$42.7M in play
These are contracts already in the rebid window or about to enter it. The weekly free issue tells you how many. The paid radar names every one.
What you get free. What costs money.
| Feature | Free weekly issue | State Recompete Radar — $49/mo |
|---|---|---|
| Last week's awards in Texas (winner, agency, amount) | Yes, the full list | |
| Short articles on the federal janitorial niche | ||
| Tips: getting registered, bid prep, what COs look for | ||
| Count of what's coming ("70 expiring in Texas") | ||
| One sample radar entry, monthly, as proof | ||
| The full forward list: every expiring contract | ||
| Incumbent, contract value, end date on each | ||
| The full 18-month rolling window | ||
| Alerts when a new contract enters the window | ||
| Incumbent watch |
History is free. The list of what's coming up for rebid is the paid radar. The median federal cleaning contract in Texas is worth about $78,000. One win you wouldn't have caught pays for the radar for years.
Questions
Can't I just find all this free myself?
You can. It's public record, which is exactly why the radar is honest work and not a secret. The catch is where it lives: awards in one place, solicitations in another, contract end dates buried in the detail of each award. Pulling one state's expiring contracts by hand is a few hours of clicking, every week, forever. I do that pull once and send you the answer. You're paying for the time, not the data.
How accurate is it?
Every dollar figure and date in an issue is checked against the source record by code before it sends. If a number can't be matched back to an official record, it doesn't go out. I'd rather drop a line than ship a number I can't stand behind.
Why $49?
Because the contracts are big and the alternative is worse. Enterprise tools like GovWin run $12,000 to $42,000 a year and are built for firms with a BD department. You don't need that. You need one state, one email, once a week. The median contract in this niche is about $78,000. If the radar helps you catch one rebid you'd have missed, $49 a month stops being a real number.
What if I work in more than one state?
Right now the POC covers Texas, Florida, and California, one state per subscription. If you bid across two, email me. I read every reply and I'll sort you out. More states are coming as the data proves out.
Can I cancel?
Any time, one click, no call. It's a monthly subscription through Stripe. Cancel and you keep access through the period you paid for, then it stops. No lock-in, no contract.
Who's behind this?
Me. I'm Chris. This is a one-person operation: I built the pipeline, I write the issues, I answer the replies. That's the whole company. The upside for you is it's cheap and fast and you're talking to the person who runs it, not a support queue. When you reply, I'm the one who reads it.
See what's expiring in Texas this week.
One sample issue. You confirm before I add you to anything. Unsubscribe any time with one click.