How to Plan Strategically to Market to Government Agencies

The purpose of obtaining a Government Contracting Strategic Plan is to target your efforts to create interest in your company.  Like private industry buyers, government buyers buy from people they know like and trust.  Government buyers cannot buy from your company if they do not know that your firm exists.  To gain visibility, it is important to target your efforts rather than take a shotgun approach.

You can create interest in your company to increase sales by marketing your business with advertising, promoting, publicizing, and engaging in public relations.  A strategic marketing plan should outline what you will do; where you will do it; what you will say; and how to match your marketing and messaging to the way your customer already thinks and operates.

First, you should build the foundation of the Strategic Government Contracting Marketing Plan by asking yourself:

1. What do you provide of value?

2. Who are your target government agencies?

3. What do your target care about and need?

4. Where do you find your targets?

5. Who influences your target?

6. How do your target agencies want to engage?

With respect to what you provide of value, ask yourself:

What do you want to sell to the government? What products? What services?
Next, look up your product and services codes in the classification systems used by government agencies.

Product and service codes can be found in the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS); National Institute of Governmental Purchasing (NIGP); and Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS) by conducting key word searches.

With regard to who your targets will be, identify a few government agencies to target.  You can start at home with the city, county, and state your business is located in.  Then venture out into other counties and the cities in those counties in your region.  Next, if you choose, you can expand into other regions in your state and eventually into adjacent states.

A strategic marketing plan need not be complex.  It can simply be a list of federal, state, county and city agencies that need what you sell.  You will need to identify the players in these agencies that you plan to contact by email, mail and phone to request face to face meetings.  Your list should include:

Contracting Officers and Specialists
Contract Compliance Officers and Small Business Liaisons
Influencers such as End Users (Department Heads, Project Managers)
Influencers such as Elected Officials, Legislators
Winning Prime contractors

You can find these individuals by using Google Unclesam and conducting key word searches.  Your goal will be to find government agency websites.  The contracting and small business staff may be in the contracting, procurement, purchasing, or finance department web pages.  You can also pick off contact information from bid solicitations and contract award notices for work related to the products and services you sell.  To find end users and elected officials, you will need to venture onto their web pages.

Create a Contacts Relations Management (CRM) database.  You can use Microsoft Excel or Access; or purchase a more robust software program.

With regard to how your targets want to engage, you may be asked:

1. to submit information by email or fax;

2. to attend a Vendor Outreach Session or Trade Fair;

3. to present your capabilities before a panel of agency representatives.

The key is to have a strategy so as to not waste your precious, valuable time and energy.  You need to be organized and prepared.

Have the following marketing items at hand:

Website
Capability Statement
Trifold Brochures
Business Cards
Promotional Items (eg Calendars, Pens, Envelope Opener)

When you meet with government buyers and influences, ask “Do you have any requirements that are a good fit with what my company sells?” and “What are your needs?” Deflate the focus on how great you are, and shift the focus on how you can help the players achieve their goals.

Marketing will grow your business!  So, NEVER, NEVER stop marketing!!

 

 

 

The 2010 Government Contractor’s Resource Guide Edition Launched As E-Book

Washington, DC-MD-VA-WV – Every 20 seconds of every working day, the U.S. Government issues a contract. Last fiscal year, U.S. Government allocated 9 billion for contracting. This makes the U.S. Government the largest marketplace in the world and a great opportunity for your business. The information on government contracting is plentiful, but sifting through extraneous information to find exactly what you need is an arduous task. To ease the information gathering process, we have assembled as much pertinent information as possible to help you obtain resources and avoid some of the pitfalls, time, money and frustration commonly experienced in government contracting.

The 2010 edition of “The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide” is now available as an e-book. This guide has been used by government contractors, contracting officers, and as resource material for university curriculum, featured in national newspapers and magazines.

“I had one goal in mind when the first edition came out in 2006, to produce an easy to use guide which incorporated my lessons learned and resources gathered from my research and almost two decades of experience as a government contractor.” states Gallagher, “When I first started out, like many others new to government contracting it seemed unfathomable that a business – never mind a small business – could penetrate the walls of government contracting and unlock the keys to success.

After many years of attending workshops, expos, training, and conducting outreach for the government all the while using my own marketing research background, I managed to harvest the key materials located throughout countless websites, books, handouts and documents, policies and procedures. I incorporated into The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide what I believe to be among the most relevant of this information, compiled into an affordable easy to use 177 page guide.”

The Guide contains information issued helpful for both large and small business going after contracts and serves as a quick reference for procurement and contracting officers when contracting with business.

“From the time the first edition was published back in 2006 testimonials keep pouring in” says Gallagher, “The testimonials on The Guide’s usefulness range from a former U.S. government agency head overseeing small business contracting hailing it as one of the most comprehensive easy to use guides she has ever seen in or out of government, to other government contractors’ testimonials – even those with years of experience – expressing its usefulness especially with contact names, phone numbers. useful websites, policy and procedure references, samples of teaming agreements, nondisclosure agreement template, and even definitions of acronyms used everyday inside government. “Nothing is more costly than plunging into the sea of unknowns of government contracting with little or no information or with so much information it seems overwhelming.” she concludes. The Government Resource Guide helps the reader decipher what to do and what not to do – at the same time providing them with additional tools to continue training, marketing and networking such as where to attend FREE workshops and other online valuable resources.

The Government Contractor’s Resource Book provides various samples of Teaming Agreements, Subcontracting Agreements, and Non-Disclosure Agreements for the business. It also provides information on how to market to find contracting and subcontracting opportunities. In addition, the Resource Book arms the contractor with types of government bidding procedures and purchasing programs, as well as explaining the contractor’s responsibilities and administrative requirement when performing on government contracts.

The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide E-book is now available through retail bookstores, online at Google books, lulu, Amazon, among others and also directly available by going to the gov2biz website. The Guide e-book is priced at .00. The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide is published by Access International, ISBN 1-3 0-0789647-0-2 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 2006907430. Daisy Gallagher is a leading expert in her field, with two decades under her belt as an award winning government contractor, and internationally recognized business leader.

Media Contact:
Author: Daisy Gallagher AMA, PMP
http://gallagher-gallagher.com

Source:
http://www.1888pressrelease.com/daisy-gallagher/government-resource-guide/the-2010-government-contractor-s-resource-guide-edition-laun-pr-194865.html

The 2010 Government Contractor’s Resource Guide Edition Launched As E-Book

Washington, DC-MD-VA-WV – Every 20 seconds of every working day, the U.S. Government issues a contract. Last fiscal year, U.S. Government allocated 9 billion for contracting. This makes the U.S. Government the largest marketplace in the world and a great opportunity for your business. The information on government contracting is plentiful, but sifting through extraneous information to find exactly what you need is an arduous task. To ease the information gathering process, we have assembled as much pertinent information as possible to help you obtain resources and avoid some of the pitfalls, time, money and frustration commonly experienced in government contracting.

The 2010 edition of “The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide” is now available as an e-book. This guide has been used by government contractors, contracting officers, and as resource material for university curriculum, featured in national newspapers and magazines.

“I had one goal in mind when the first edition came out in 2006, to produce an easy to use guide which incorporated my lessons learned and resources gathered from my research and almost two decades of experience as a government contractor.” states Gallagher, “When I first started out, like many others new to government contracting it seemed unfathomable that a business – never mind a small business – could penetrate the walls of government contracting and unlock the keys to success.

After many years of attending workshops, expos, training, and conducting outreach for the government all the while using my own marketing research background, I managed to harvest the key materials located throughout countless websites, books, handouts and documents, policies and procedures. I incorporated into The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide what I believe to be among the most relevant of this information, compiled into an affordable easy to use 177 page guide.”

The Guide contains information issued helpful for both large and small business going after contracts and serves as a quick reference for procurement and contracting officers when contracting with business.

“From the time the first edition was published back in 2006 testimonials keep pouring in” says Gallagher, “The testimonials on The Guide’s usefulness range from a former U.S. government agency head overseeing small business contracting hailing it as one of the most comprehensive easy to use guides she has ever seen in or out of government, to other government contractors’ testimonials – even those with years of experience – expressing its usefulness especially with contact names, phone numbers. useful websites, policy and procedure references, samples of teaming agreements, nondisclosure agreement template, and even definitions of acronyms used everyday inside government. “Nothing is more costly than plunging into the sea of unknowns of government contracting with little or no information or with so much information it seems overwhelming.” she concludes. The Government Resource Guide helps the reader decipher what to do and what not to do – at the same time providing them with additional tools to continue training, marketing and networking such as where to attend FREE workshops and other online valuable resources.

The Government Contractor’s Resource Book provides various samples of Teaming Agreements, Subcontracting Agreements, and Non-Disclosure Agreements for the business. It also provides information on how to market to find contracting and subcontracting opportunities. In addition, the Resource Book arms the contractor with types of government bidding procedures and purchasing programs, as well as explaining the contractor’s responsibilities and administrative requirement when performing on government contracts.

The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide E-book is now available through retail bookstores, online at Google books, lulu, Amazon, among others and also directly available by going to the gov2biz website. The Guide e-book is priced at .00. The Government Contractor’s Resource Guide is published by Access International, ISBN 1-3 0-0789647-0-2 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 2006907430. Daisy Gallagher is a leading expert in her field, with two decades under her belt as an award winning government contractor, and internationally recognized business leader.

Media Contact:
Author: Daisy Gallagher AMA, PMP
http://gallagher-gallagher.com

Source:
http://www.1888pressrelease.com/daisy-gallagher/government-resource-guide/the-2010-government-contractor-s-resource-guide-edition-laun-pr-194865.html