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July 13, 2008 at 1:57 PM #13274July 13, 2008 at 3:08 PM #238722gandalfParticipant
Strong service/career background helps. So does the disabled veteran business certification. Most importantly, choose your business partners carefully, people you can work with and trust. The big integrators are called “Beltway Bandits” for a reason. Smalls get taken for a ride all the time. Parallels our experience, significant project opportunity with DoD, we walked away from it, problematic requests, excessive litigiousness, writing on the wall. IMHO, there’s a problem with prevailing business culture and also organization of the industry.
July 13, 2008 at 3:08 PM #238931gandalfParticipantStrong service/career background helps. So does the disabled veteran business certification. Most importantly, choose your business partners carefully, people you can work with and trust. The big integrators are called “Beltway Bandits” for a reason. Smalls get taken for a ride all the time. Parallels our experience, significant project opportunity with DoD, we walked away from it, problematic requests, excessive litigiousness, writing on the wall. IMHO, there’s a problem with prevailing business culture and also organization of the industry.
July 13, 2008 at 3:08 PM #238922gandalfParticipantStrong service/career background helps. So does the disabled veteran business certification. Most importantly, choose your business partners carefully, people you can work with and trust. The big integrators are called “Beltway Bandits” for a reason. Smalls get taken for a ride all the time. Parallels our experience, significant project opportunity with DoD, we walked away from it, problematic requests, excessive litigiousness, writing on the wall. IMHO, there’s a problem with prevailing business culture and also organization of the industry.
July 13, 2008 at 3:08 PM #238871gandalfParticipantStrong service/career background helps. So does the disabled veteran business certification. Most importantly, choose your business partners carefully, people you can work with and trust. The big integrators are called “Beltway Bandits” for a reason. Smalls get taken for a ride all the time. Parallels our experience, significant project opportunity with DoD, we walked away from it, problematic requests, excessive litigiousness, writing on the wall. IMHO, there’s a problem with prevailing business culture and also organization of the industry.
July 13, 2008 at 3:08 PM #238864gandalfParticipantStrong service/career background helps. So does the disabled veteran business certification. Most importantly, choose your business partners carefully, people you can work with and trust. The big integrators are called “Beltway Bandits” for a reason. Smalls get taken for a ride all the time. Parallels our experience, significant project opportunity with DoD, we walked away from it, problematic requests, excessive litigiousness, writing on the wall. IMHO, there’s a problem with prevailing business culture and also organization of the industry.
July 13, 2008 at 3:53 PM #238879Allan from FallbrookParticipantDavid: Start with the local SBA office. That is the best place to begin, especially when it comes to the various “set aside” designations: 8(a), HUBZone (Historically Underutilized Business Zone), DVBE (Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise), etc.
They can also put you in touch with your local state agency responsible for the parallel state programs. California has a state designation for minority, woman owned, disabled vet, etc.
The Federal government is required by law to spend fixed percentages of their contract dollars on various designations, so research is key.
I work with quite a few government contractors in the military and federal markets and gandalf is right: You need to be careful with whom you work. A lot of the large players have figured out how to game the system using these designations to their advantage, so research the markets, the players and the history.
July 13, 2008 at 3:53 PM #238885Allan from FallbrookParticipantDavid: Start with the local SBA office. That is the best place to begin, especially when it comes to the various “set aside” designations: 8(a), HUBZone (Historically Underutilized Business Zone), DVBE (Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise), etc.
They can also put you in touch with your local state agency responsible for the parallel state programs. California has a state designation for minority, woman owned, disabled vet, etc.
The Federal government is required by law to spend fixed percentages of their contract dollars on various designations, so research is key.
I work with quite a few government contractors in the military and federal markets and gandalf is right: You need to be careful with whom you work. A lot of the large players have figured out how to game the system using these designations to their advantage, so research the markets, the players and the history.
July 13, 2008 at 3:53 PM #238739Allan from FallbrookParticipantDavid: Start with the local SBA office. That is the best place to begin, especially when it comes to the various “set aside” designations: 8(a), HUBZone (Historically Underutilized Business Zone), DVBE (Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise), etc.
They can also put you in touch with your local state agency responsible for the parallel state programs. California has a state designation for minority, woman owned, disabled vet, etc.
The Federal government is required by law to spend fixed percentages of their contract dollars on various designations, so research is key.
I work with quite a few government contractors in the military and federal markets and gandalf is right: You need to be careful with whom you work. A lot of the large players have figured out how to game the system using these designations to their advantage, so research the markets, the players and the history.
July 13, 2008 at 3:53 PM #238937Allan from FallbrookParticipantDavid: Start with the local SBA office. That is the best place to begin, especially when it comes to the various “set aside” designations: 8(a), HUBZone (Historically Underutilized Business Zone), DVBE (Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise), etc.
They can also put you in touch with your local state agency responsible for the parallel state programs. California has a state designation for minority, woman owned, disabled vet, etc.
The Federal government is required by law to spend fixed percentages of their contract dollars on various designations, so research is key.
I work with quite a few government contractors in the military and federal markets and gandalf is right: You need to be careful with whom you work. A lot of the large players have figured out how to game the system using these designations to their advantage, so research the markets, the players and the history.
July 13, 2008 at 3:53 PM #238945Allan from FallbrookParticipantDavid: Start with the local SBA office. That is the best place to begin, especially when it comes to the various “set aside” designations: 8(a), HUBZone (Historically Underutilized Business Zone), DVBE (Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise), etc.
They can also put you in touch with your local state agency responsible for the parallel state programs. California has a state designation for minority, woman owned, disabled vet, etc.
The Federal government is required by law to spend fixed percentages of their contract dollars on various designations, so research is key.
I work with quite a few government contractors in the military and federal markets and gandalf is right: You need to be careful with whom you work. A lot of the large players have figured out how to game the system using these designations to their advantage, so research the markets, the players and the history.
July 13, 2008 at 6:04 PM #238811jennyoParticipantYou can also check the state Department of General Services website, under Procurement Division.
http://www.pd.dgs.ca.gov/smbus/default.htm
Can’t speak for the federal government program, but the state program is fairly active, the Governor has set high targets for state agencies to use DVBE and small business contracts. California no longer has the minority/women-owned designation post Prop 209. Small/microbusinesses and DVBE are the only “special” ones that the state recognizes. In some cases, DGS has a single contract with one service provider that all state agencies must use; the only exception is if the agency uses a small biz or DVBE.
July 13, 2008 at 6:04 PM #238949jennyoParticipantYou can also check the state Department of General Services website, under Procurement Division.
http://www.pd.dgs.ca.gov/smbus/default.htm
Can’t speak for the federal government program, but the state program is fairly active, the Governor has set high targets for state agencies to use DVBE and small business contracts. California no longer has the minority/women-owned designation post Prop 209. Small/microbusinesses and DVBE are the only “special” ones that the state recognizes. In some cases, DGS has a single contract with one service provider that all state agencies must use; the only exception is if the agency uses a small biz or DVBE.
July 13, 2008 at 6:04 PM #238956jennyoParticipantYou can also check the state Department of General Services website, under Procurement Division.
http://www.pd.dgs.ca.gov/smbus/default.htm
Can’t speak for the federal government program, but the state program is fairly active, the Governor has set high targets for state agencies to use DVBE and small business contracts. California no longer has the minority/women-owned designation post Prop 209. Small/microbusinesses and DVBE are the only “special” ones that the state recognizes. In some cases, DGS has a single contract with one service provider that all state agencies must use; the only exception is if the agency uses a small biz or DVBE.
July 13, 2008 at 6:04 PM #239007jennyoParticipantYou can also check the state Department of General Services website, under Procurement Division.
http://www.pd.dgs.ca.gov/smbus/default.htm
Can’t speak for the federal government program, but the state program is fairly active, the Governor has set high targets for state agencies to use DVBE and small business contracts. California no longer has the minority/women-owned designation post Prop 209. Small/microbusinesses and DVBE are the only “special” ones that the state recognizes. In some cases, DGS has a single contract with one service provider that all state agencies must use; the only exception is if the agency uses a small biz or DVBE.
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