In the high-stakes world of SLED (State, Local, and Higher Education), a formal Win/Loss program is a revenue engine. With multi-year procurement cycles and public funds on the line, the cost of a “Loss” isn’t just a missed quota; it’s a multi-year lockout from a key territory.
Research from Gartner (2025) confirms that a rigorous, independent Win/Loss program can lift win rates by up to 50%. However, achieving that lift requires intelligence that most organizations currently miss. Many are attempting to scale their debriefs using AI, only to find that in SLED, “efficiency” is often the enemy of the truth.
The “Rapport Barrier”: Why AI Cannot Interview the Public Sector Buyer
SLED procurement is built on personal accountability. When a committee at a state agency or a university board spends 18 months evaluating your solution, they expect a peer-level conversation during the post-mortem.
According to the 2025 Edelman Trust Barometer, trust in AI has dropped to just 32% in the U.S. When you ask a senior public official to give feedback to a bot, you signal that their time isn’t worth a human conversation.
A Competitive Field Strategist honors that partnership. They pick up on the hesitation in a voice, ask the follow-up question that uncovers a hidden stakeholder’s objection, and navigate the “off-the-record” feedback that a bot—and a public FOIA request—will never capture.
AI Utility: Extracting the Seller’s Mind
This is not to say AI has no place in the process. AI is a valuable tool for Internal Intelligence.
Tools designed to “extract the intel” from your sales team are vital for capturing tribal knowledge before it dies in a CRM field. These tools help you understand how your team felt about the product, the pricing, and the pitch. They are perfect for identifying internal friction and ensuring the seller’s perspective is documented at scale.
The Truth is in the Triangulation
The danger arises when organizations believe that the Seller’s Mind is the Buyer’s Reality.
Internal intel is inherently subjective. A seller who just lost a $5M contract is naturally going to protect their relationship—they may cite “price” because it’s the path of least resistance. Research from Validity (2025) reveals that 37% of sales staff admit to filtering or fabricating data in the CRM to avoid internal friction.
To find the real reason a deal was won or lost, you must triangulate the two voices:
- The Voice of the Seller (Internal/AI-Extracted): Captures the internal friction, the process gaps, and the perceived objections from the field.
- The Voice of the Buyer (External/Strategist-Led): Uncovers the political landmines, the actual stakeholder influence, and the “off-the-record” decision criteria that a bot—and an RFP—will never see.
When you only have one side of the story, you are flying blind. When you have both, you have a navigation system. By utilizing a Competitive Field Strategist to bridge this gap, you move beyond “debriefing” and start architecting the next win.
Extracting the seller’s mind gives you a post-mortem. Verifying the buyer’s truth gives you the Competitive Edge.
References
- Gartner (2025): “Tech Go-to-Market: Three Ways Marketers Can Use Data From Win/Loss Analysis to Increase Win Rates and Revenues.”
- Validity (2025): “The State of CRM Data Management in 2025.”
- Edelman (2025/2026): “Trust and Artificial Intelligence at a Crossroads.” * Texas HB 149 (TRAIGA): Texas Responsible Artificial Intelligence Governance Act. Effective January 1, 2026.
- Colorado SB24-205: Consumer Protections for Artificial Intelligence. Effective February 1, 2026.
- NIST (2025):AI Risk Management Framework (AI RMF 2.0). ***

