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The Big Idea
RFPs Are Usually the End of the Story — Not the Beginning
By: Christian Banach
on May 6, 2026

Problem / Context

Many agencies think they are early because they got invited into the RFP.

But by the time an RFP becomes visible, a lot has already happened.

Budget conversations have started. Internal priorities have shifted. Leadership has aligned around a problem. In some cases, agencies are already being discussed quietly behind the scenes.

That means most firms are entering the process after the market has already moved.

This is one of the biggest reasons modern new business feels harder than it used to.

Teams are competing at the point where everyone else can see the opportunity too.

The Signal

One of the strongest signals in modern agency business development is organizational change.

That could be:

  • A new CMO
  • A new product launch
  • A funding round
  • A merger or acquisition
  • A shift in leadership structure
  • Hiring activity tied to growth or transformation

These moments usually happen before an agency search becomes public.

We see this repeatedly across executive conversations, CMO interviews, job postings, and market announcements.

The signal is not the opportunity itself.

The signal is evidence that priorities may be changing.


We explore this idea in more depth in our “How to Find and Win the Companies Hiring Agencies — Before the RFP” webinar, including real examples of the signals agencies should be paying attention to.

Why It Matters

Most agency outreach still happens without context.

A generic capabilities email. A cold pitch. A random check-in.

The problem is not just that buyers ignore these messages.

The bigger issue is that they show no understanding of what the company is actually going through.

Signals create relevance.

If a company just hired a new marketing leader, there may be pressure to evaluate positioning, performance, agency relationships, customer acquisition, or internal capabilities.

That does not guarantee a project.

But it gives you a much smarter lens for how to show up.

The Mistake Most Teams Make

Most teams treat signals as permission to sell.

They see a funding announcement and immediately send a pitch.

They see a new CMO and rush into outbound.

That approach usually fails because the timing may be wrong, the context may be incomplete, and the outreach often feels transactional.

Signals are not a shortcut to sales.

They are guidance.

The goal is not to pounce.

The goal is to better understand what may be changing inside the organization.

The Smarter Move

The smarter move is to use signals to guide relationship-building behavior.

That could mean:

  • Sharing relevant research
  • Sending thoughtful commentary tied to the company’s direction
  • Inviting leaders into a peer roundtable
  • Connecting around an industry event
  • Staying visible through valuable content

AI can help surface these signals faster.

But judgment still matters.

The advantage is not simply knowing that something changed.

The advantage is understanding what the change might mean.

How to Use This

The agencies building the strongest pipelines today are not waiting for opportunities to become obvious.

They are paying attention earlier.

Not to sell faster.

But to understand where companies may be heading before everyone else shows up.

That creates better conversations, stronger positioning, and more trust over time.

Because the best business development is not built on volume.

It is built on relevance, timing, and relationships.

Christian Banach
Christian Banach is the founder of NextBigWin and a leader in agency growth and business development, bringing over 20 years of experience. He serves on the 4A’s Expert Network and has helped holdco agencies, such as Energy BBDO, and independents win millions in new business from brands like Disney, Toyota, and Kohl’s.