If you’ve worked inside Leidos Prism, you already know this situation:
You open the system to create a requisition.
It feels like a straightforward task:
- enter details
- define supplier
- submit
Simple.
But in reality, it takes longer than expected — almost every time.
The expectation vs actual workflow
You expect a linear process:
Create → fill → submit → done
But Prism doesn’t work like that.
It’s not just form entry.
It’s a controlled procurement workflow system.
What actually happens when you create a requisition
Let’s break down a real scenario step-by-step:
- You enter Prism Leidos
- Navigate to requisition creation
- Start filling out required fields
- Encounter dependent fields (that only appear after inputs)
- Adjust based on system prompts
- Validate entries
- Submit → and wait for workflow routing
Where time is actually lost
| Step | Expected | Actual behavior |
|---|---|---|
| Field entry | Straightforward | Conditional dependencies |
| Supplier input | Simple selection | Validation & matching required |
| Submission | Final step | Workflow routing begins |
The hidden issue: dependent logic
Prism doesn’t show everything at once.
Fields appear or change based on:
- procurement type
- funding structure
- supplier status
So instead of filling once, you:
- adjust inputs
- revisit sections
- re-check values
Real friction point
You think you’re done.
Then the system flags:
- missing field
- incorrect format
- incomplete dependency
Why this matters
Because the system is not reactive.
It’s rule-driven.
And those rules are not always visible upfront.
Example
You enter supplier info.
Looks fine.
But:
- supplier must match approved list
- classification must align
- contract type affects validation
Now you go back.
The loop
Input → validation → correction → re-check → submit
Why new users struggle more
Because they expect:
- flexibility
- fast submission
But Prism expects:
- accuracy
- structured input
- compliance alignment
What actually helps (practical use)
1. Don’t treat it like a simple form
Think of it as:
A system that validates before allowing progress.
2. Anticipate dependencies
Before entering data, consider:
- supplier type
- contract category
- funding details
3. Slow down at the start
Rushing early creates:
- more corrections later
- longer total time
4. Validate mentally before system validation
Ask:
“Does this input logically fit the request?”
FAQ
Why does creating a requisition in Leidos Prism take so long?
Because of conditional fields and validation rules.
Why do fields keep changing?
Because the system adapts based on inputs.
Can you make it faster?
Yes — by anticipating dependencies and avoiding rework.
The key insight
Prism Leidos is not slowing you down randomly.
It’s forcing accuracy before submission.
Final thought
What feels like inefficiency is actually control.
You’re not filling a form.
You’re building a request that must pass multiple invisible checks.