Responding to the Top 10 Most Common Reviewer Critiques on Rejected NIH & NSF SBIRs
Rejection hurts, but it's also one of the most valuable parts of the SBIR journey.
Written by Scout Editorial Team
Rejection hurts, but it's also one of the most valuable parts of the SBIR journey. When NIH or NSF reviewers return your proposal with a long list of "strengths and weaknesses," it's not the end. It's your blueprint for how to turn a good submission into a winning one.
At Scout, we've analyzed hundreds of reviewer comments and resubmissions. Across agencies, industries, and technologies, the same 10 critiques show up again and again and nearly all can be fixed with clearer storytelling, better strategy, and stronger alignment between R&D and commercialization.
Here's what reviewers commonly flag and how to address each in your next submission.
🧠 Top 10 Most Common Reviewer Critiques (and How to Fix Them)
# | Reviewer Critique | What It Means | How to Address It in Resubmission |
|---|---|---|---|
1 | Market need is not large enough | Reviewers doubt there's enough demand for your innovation. | Clearly define your target market, quantify affected populations, and include TAM/SAM/SOM metrics. Use data to show commercial potential. |
2 | Design specs of the innovation are unclear | Reviewers don't understand what your product actually does. | Rewrite the innovation section with a clear, one-sentence summary, list of unique features, visuals, and a strong value proposition. |
3 | Roles and responsibilities are unclear | It's not clear who's doing the work or if your team can deliver. | Define key personnel's roles in biosketches, describe contributions in the narrative, and include letters of collaboration from third parties. |
4 | Regulatory pathway not discussed | For health-related innovations, reviewers want to see FDA readiness. | Summarize your regulatory pathway in both the summary and narrative; for Phase II, include detailed plans and a regulatory expert. |
5 | Gender breakdown missing in animal or human studies | Reviewers need assurance your study reflects real-world populations. | Specify male/female ratios, justify the mix, and update Human Subjects documentation accordingly. |
6 | No clear intellectual property (IP) strategy | Reviewers need to see how your innovation will stay protected. | Mention current and planned patents, trade secrets, or trademarks. Identify your IP counsel and describe long-term portfolio strategy. |
7 | Commercialization plan is unclear | Reviewers can't see how your R&D leads to revenue or impact. | Present one focused commercialization pathway tied to your Phase I/II goals. Avoid multiple "maybe" scenarios. |
8 | No quantitative metrics for success | Reviewers can't tell how you'll measure progress. | Define clear, data-driven success metrics (e.g., 25% efficiency gain, 2x delivery speed) for each experiment. |
9 | Technology isn't innovative | Reviewers don't see what's new or different. | Explain the competitive landscape, emphasize your unique value proposition, and directly state "This technology is innovative because…" |
10 | Proposed timeline is overly ambitious | The work plan looks unrealistic within SBIR timeframes. | Simplify: focus on 2–3 critical experiments, extend duration if possible, and realign budget and milestones accordingly. |
How to Use Reviewer Feedback Strategically
If your proposal wasn't funded, it doesn't mean your idea isn't strong. It just means it wasn't communicated clearly enough. NIH and NSF reviewers evaluate risk, feasibility, and commercial alignment. Each critique you receive is a signal for where your story fell short.
Here's how to turn reviewer comments into progress:
Prioritize fixes by impact. Market, technical clarity, and team credibility matter most.
Update your 1-page summary to highlight how each critique was addressed.
Rewrite key sections (don't just patch sentences). Reviewers will notice genuine improvement.
Back every claim with data. Measurable impact wins confidence.
💡 The Bottom Line
Every "no" gets you closer to a "yes."
The best SBIR founders treat reviewer critiques as free consulting from federal R&D experts. Whether you're resubmitting to NIH or NSF, focus on clarity, credibility, and commercial logic.
A strong resubmission shows not just that your idea is fundable, but that you as a founder are coachable and capable of turning feedback into innovation that lasts.