1 / 20

Mission and Installation Contracting Command (MICC) Small Business Programs

Melissa Garcia Small Business Specialist/ Business Operations Division Chief, MICC-Bliss. Mission and Installation Contracting Command (MICC) Small Business Programs. Agenda. DISCUSSION. Who We Are (Mission and Installation Contracting Command) What We Do

Download Presentation

Mission and Installation Contracting Command (MICC) Small Business Programs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Melissa Garcia Small Business Specialist/ Business Operations Division Chief, MICC-Bliss Mission and Installation Contracting Command (MICC) Small Business Programs

  2. Agenda DISCUSSION • Who We Are (Mission and Installation Contracting Command) • What We Do • Mission of the Small Business Program • Pursuing Opportunities • What We Buy/What We do not Buy • Common Pitfalls to Avoid • SB Goals and Achievements • Supplier Self-Services (SUS) Program

  3. Who We Are (1 of 2) • The Mission and Installation Contracting Command (MICC) is headquartered at Fort Sam Houston, TX • The MICC is made up of four brigades: • 418th CSB (9 Contracting Offices) • 419th CSB (7 Contracting Offices) • FDO Fort Sam Houston (3 Contracting Offices) • FDO Eustis (11 Contracting Offices) • 30 Installation Contracting Offices throughout the country

  4. Who We Are (2 of 2) Small Business Programs Personnel Supporting the 418th Contracting Support Brigade (CSB): • Deputy Assistant Director of Small Business Programs, Luis O Trinidad • Small Business Professionals: • Angela Arwood – MICC-Carson, MICC-DPG, MICC- Polk • Diane House – MICC-Irwin, MICC-Riley, MICC-YPG • Jennifer Mitchell – MICC-JBLM, MICC- Fort Hood • Melissa Garcia – MICC-Bliss

  5. What We Do • The MICC provides Army Commands, Installations and Activities with responsive contracting solutions and oversight. On order, provides trained and deployable Contracting Support Brigades to the Operating Force.

  6. Mission of the Small Business Program • The Small Business Program is dedicated to ensuring maximum contracting opportunities are afforded to small business socioeconomic categories (Small Business (SB), Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB), 8(a), Woman Owned Small Business (WOSB), Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business (SDVOSB), and HUBZone Small Business) • Command Priority – “Maintain Small Business Transparency and Drive Small Business Results”

  7. Pursuing Opportunities (1 of 5) • You must register your business before you can pursue awards with the Federal Government: • If you need assistance with this process, contact your nearest Procurement Technical Assistance Center (PTAC) • Look at the MICC Acquisition Forecast • Go to https://www.micc.army.mil/small-business.asp • Select the “business opportunities” tab • Click the “MICC Advanced Acquisition Plan” link • Knowledge is empowering • Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) • Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) • Army Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (AFARS) • These regulations can be accessed at http://farsite.hill.af.mil/

  8. Pursuing Opportunities (2 of 5) • Marketing Sets the Pace • Know your Federal Supply Class or Service Codes (FSC/SVC) and North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code for your product or service • Respond to Sources Sought Notices and Requests For Information (RFI) • Develop a Capabilities Brief • Provide your Small Business Professional with a copy of your Capabilities Brief • Maintain your website, System for Award Management (SAM), and Dynamic Small Business Search (DSBS) profile up to date • Work with the SBA to obtain certification or self-certify, as applicable, for all programs you believe you qualify for. Visit www.sba.gov for more information.

  9. Pursuing Opportunities (3 of 5) • Know your customer’s product/service requirements • Focus your marketing efforts • Federal Procurement Data System Next Generation--www.fpdsng.gov • FBO.gov • FEDBID.com • MICC Advanced Acquisition Plan • Attend site visits • Capabilities brief recommendations • Keep it concise (preferably 1-3 pages) • Include your DUNS, CAGE, and socioeconomic status(es) • Include contract numbers and dollar value when citing past performance/previous projects • Investigate small business fairs or matchmaking sessions

  10. Pursuing Opportunities (4 of 5) • Check Out GSA schedule – is it right for you? • Federal agencies may use Government-wide Acquisition Contracts (GWAC) and GSA Federal Supply Schedule (FSS) contracts to make purchases. These pre-approved contracts are used to buy commonly used products, services, and solutions. Opportunities are rarely announced on FedBizOpps, but are normally competed among pre-qualified vendors already under contract. www.gsa.gov • Explore Subcontracting Opportunities • Subcontracting opportunities through Prime contracts is a large secondary market • SBA Sub-Net is a resource on which Prime contractors can post subcontracting opportunities-http://web.sba.gov/subnet/.Establish relationships with prime contractors

  11. Pursuing Opportunities (5 of 5) • Know the resources available to assist you • Procurement Technical Assistance Centers (PTACS) are located in most states and provide small business concerns with information on how to do business with the Government • Small Business Specialists are normally available to provide information on how to do business with the Government as well as site specific information • Vendors are not authorized to market “door-to-door” to units/activities.

  12. What We Buy • MICC Fort Bliss is responsible for base operations support actions which include: • Supplies • Services • Minor Construction/Repair/Maintenance • Information Technology Services • Other

  13. What We Do Not Buy • Military Construction Appropriations (ground up) • Army Corps of Engineers • Medical Services and Supply • MEDCOM Regional Contracting Offices • Transportation requirements (include movement of freight) • Military Surface Deployment and Distribution Command (MSDDC)

  14. CommonPitfallsto Avoid • Read the solicitation/instructions • Ex. IFB Instructions vs RFP Instructions • Requesting delay in NTP • SOW Specifics and Requirements • Security/Installation Access Rqmts • Installation Specific Training Rqmts • Identifying shortfalls in SOW/Drawings early

  15. Small Business Achievement FY2018 MICC Fort Bliss FY18 Small Business Achievement: $64 Million went to Small Business

  16. Small Business Achievement FY 2018 Achievement in Dollars

  17. Small Business Achievement FY 2018 Additional Achievements • Ranked number four in HubZone achievement. • Ranked number four in WOSB achievement. • Increased local SB achievement by 50% over the last FY.

  18. Small Business Achievement FY2019 (2nd Qtr)

  19. Supplier Self-Service (SUS) Program SUS is a Vendor Portal • Linked to Wide Area Workflow (WAWF) • Improves invoice accuracy • Enables you to get paid faster • Pre-populates e-invoice for you • Validates e-invoice for you in real-time before submission • Eliminates erroneous data What you need: • Internet Access • WAWF User ID • Pay Office on contract is assigned HQ0678 for Army

  20. Questions?

More Related