AI is on every GovCon buyer's checklist. But buyers are not expecting every company to be AI-native — they are expecting every company to have a grounded, credible story about where AI improves what they do and how they deliver it. The companies that cannot tell that story are being marked down. The companies that are telling it without being able to back it up are being exposed in diligence.
This was a consistent signal from a May 2026 roundtable on GovCon M&A, where four leading practitioners described how AI is — and is not — showing up in deal processes.
The adoption spectrum is wide
The honest picture of AI in GovCon today is a wide spectrum. Some companies have been using AI-enabled tools in operations, delivery, and proposal development for years and lead with it naturally. Others are constructing AI stories in reaction to market pressure — stories that have not been tested and will not hold up to scrutiny.
What buyers are actually looking for
The bar is not "AI-native." The bar is "AI-credible." Buyers want to see that a company understands where AI improves operations, delivery, governance, productivity, and customer outcomes — and that the people running the company have a grounded, practical view of both the capability and the limitations.
AI governance is now a board-level topic
The governance question — what systems the company is using, how they are tested, what the policies are — is now being asked at the board level and by buyers in diligence. Companies that have not yet built a documented AI governance posture are behind on a question that is moving from optional to expected.
What a credible AI story looks like
A credible AI story in GovCon is not a slide about market opportunity. It is a specific, grounded description of:
- Where AI is being used today in delivery, operations, or proposal development
- What the measurable impact has been (productivity, throughput, cost, quality)
- What governance is in place to manage risk, accuracy, and security
- How the company is building AI capability into the team and operating model
- What the realistic roadmap looks like — and what the limitations are
The CFO's role in the AI story
The financial story around AI investment — where the capital is going, what the return hypothesis is, and how AI-driven productivity will show up in the P&L — is a CFO-level responsibility. A GovCon fractional CFO with transaction experience can help build the financial narrative that connects the AI story to enterprise value. That connection is increasingly what buyers want to see — and what separates operators from storytellers.