
Built by people who bid alongside you.
GovBid AI is a NYC-registered MBE (cert # on request) building proposal tooling for the kind of firm we are: small, technical, federally-registered, and tired of losing capture weeks to formatting.
We use the product on our own bids first. Every feature ships only after it's survived a real submission with our own SAM registration on the line.
| UEI | on request |
| CAGE Code | on request |
| EIN | on request |
| NYC MBE Cert | on request |
| Cert expiration | 2027-05-31 |
| 8(a) status | Application under SBA review |
| Founded | 2021 |
| Live customers since | 2024 |
| Primary NAICS | 541512 |
| Secondary NAICS | 541511 · 541519 · 518210 · 611420 |
| Registered address | 420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 1402, POB 1005 |
| City, State, ZIP | New York, NY 10170 |
| Phone | (646) 671-3399 |
| Parent entity | IT Custom Solution LLC |
In the spring of 2023 we walked away from a $1.4M cloud migration RFP we should have won. Capture had spent three weeks on it. The Section L paragraphs were dense, the page limit was tight, and on the Friday before submission we made the math: another 80 hours of writing, against a probabilistic shot at a contract.
We no-bid. We were the right firm. The work would have been the most interesting we'd done that year. The reason we walked is that the writing economy of a federal proposal had not changed since 1985, and we had not yet built the thing that would have changed it.
GovBid AI is that thing. It is not a wrapper around a chat interface. It is a retrieval system over SAM.gov, your past performance library, and the agency's accepted proposal corpus, with a writing layer tuned to the voice your firm has already won in. It does not make decisions. It makes the next few minutes of work cost less than the next eight days.
We're a small team, in New York, NY, building for firms that look like ours. If that is you, the trial is two weeks long and asks nothing of your card. Bring a live solicitation. Leave with a draft.
· Olufela Fagbure, Founder & Director