Monday Morning Contracting Tips
Dannie E. James
djames@jegroupllc.com
As a small business
begins the proposal submission process to federal government agencies or
to prime contractors the past performance challenge is a major
challenge. By definition a start-up company in government contracting
has no direct government agency past performance projects to site in
meeting the requirement in requests for proposals (RFP’s) for historical
references to similar projects in terms of size, duration and
complexity.
Past
performance data must be specific to the enterprise bidding a contract.
Many companies attempt to site historical references to performance of
individuals now in the company when they were with other firms,
achievements by predecessor companies or successful projects that the
current company did not perform as its current entity. Some federal
agencies identified this reference as "Fronting" a new enterprise with
misleading information about the Company’s past performance.
So how can a new organization or one that is new to government contracting muster a response to the past performance challenge?
The
answer lies in historical projects that may be similar in the
commercial arena and a high quality proposal that clearly demonstrates
an understanding of the requirement at hand, a unique and cost effective
project plan and high performing personnel and/or products tailored to
the statement of work to offset an interim, light past performance
record.
A
past performance reference sheet usually accompanies an agency RFP. It
normally requires the bidder to fill it out with references to
historical projects the company has performed and the contact points for
confirmation. The government may request these forms in advance of the
main body of the proposal to allow enough time to send them to the
references. The past performance form is sent by the government to the
references and you never see the result. The input goes directly from
your past performance references back to the government.
Many
small businesses work through prime contractors to "Grow" past
performance history (subcontracts count). By teaming with a sizable firm
a small entity can relate its participation to larger projects and
ultimately graduate to a good library of references, carefully
maintained and kept as a living, growing data base of good customer
service records that can be sited again and again in proposals.
It
is wise to keep customer perceptions of your professionalism and
products or services alive by constant vigilance, visits, surveys and
other feedback mechanisms so that you are not surprised at a proposal
debriefing when you find that a client you thought rated you highly did
not.
The
major services maintain past performance records by contract that you
can access. Inquire with them as to a membership at the appropriate web
site and review them regularly. The GSA utilizes service companies to
rate contractors. You can get your rating by inquiring with them, much
like a credit rating, except pertinent to cost, schedule and technical
performance. Monitor your D&B report. It is always out there for
prime contractor and government assessment of your financial health,
your vendor payment history, your organization profile and your rating.
Insure
your web site, your capability statement and your marketing plans are
maintained current alive and dynamically reflective of your successes as
you pursue new business and carefully develop your library of past
performance record by project with accessible profiles to use in your
government proposals.
All The Best
Dannie E. James Sr
JE Group LLC
Phone: 404-557-0027
Fax: 404-521-4018
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