Selling to the Feds:
Calendar Concerns
So you want to sell to federal agencies but dont know how.
Where do you start? How do you find out about selling to agencies?
Where can you go to learn how to market and sell to agencies?
Selling to federal agencies has in recent years become more like
commercial sales, but there are still major differences. Federal
agencies buy on a different annual cycle, use different contract
vehicles, have different procurement rules, and have different
institutional concerns than their commercial counterparts. In
this and following articles, I will examine some of the differences
and similarities between selling to federal agencies
and commercial customers.
Before trotting down to your local agency contract shop, you first
need to know how that agency operates, how it buys goods and services,
and, very importantly, when the agency tends to buy things and
when is it likely to put you off. A good salesperson wants to
know that he or she will be able to close the deal and get the
customer to sign on the dotted line (or in this case block 31a
of Standard Form 1449). There is no sense spending lots of time
and effort if you cant close the deal.
While commercial businesses buy throughout the year, sometimes
affected by end-of-quarter concerns, the federal government has
a distinct fiscal year buying cycle. The governments fiscal
year budget runs from October 1 to September 30 of each year.
The President and the Congress duke it out every year deciding
the amount of money each agency will get for the year. Actual
funding, however, is often delayed for many months after the start
of the fiscal year and often doesnt arrive until the spring
or summer.
In keeping with this fiscal year cycle, agencies often spend the
autumn and winter months planning this years acquisitions
and next years budget request. Come the spring, the buying
begins in earnest. The buying culminates in the late summer feeding
frenzy when 10 percent of all federal procurement funds
are expended. Agencies are loathe to forgo spending their budget
in full, since unused funds are returned to the Treasury. Whats
worse, unused funds can be held against the agencys budget
request for the next year, since if the agency didnt spend
its funding this year, it probably needs less next year. To avoid
this calamity, contracting officers have been known to work until
midnight on September 30 signing purchase orders and contracts
to avoiding losing funding.
The governments buying cycle is one reason why it is harder
to establish a federal presence than a commercial one. You cant
expect to start a sales drive in November and hit it big that
month. Your government customers may not yet have received their
fiscal year funding, and in any event are still deciding how to
spend their budget. Even with steady marketing, you may not snag
sales until the spring and summer. Likewise, you cant expect
to open shop in June and score big even though the buying season
is just beginning. Agencies may have already decided what to buy,
and youre now too late to the dance.
The governments buying cycle is one of the many reasons
why I warn my clients that it takes time to gain federal sales,
more time than commercial sales. You need patience, perseverance,
and timing. On the other hand, once you have established your
company with agency customers, the business can be steady and
long-lasting. In this way, selling to federal agencies is like
a supertanker: it takes a long time to gather speed, but once
you are under way, it takes miles to slow down or turn around.
I dont mean to imply that a contractor wont get any
business during the autumn and winter months. Once a vendor has
been through the fiscal year budget and spending cycle, the contractor
should have a backlog of orders awarded in the summer that arent
due for delivery until the autumn or winter, or ongoing delivery
and service contracts that last throughout the year. Miscellaneous
orders for upgrades, maintenance, and repair can arrive at any
time in the fiscal year cycle. Its just that a vendor needs
to be cognizant of its customers buying habits and rhythms.
In the case of federal agencies, the fiscal year provides an overall
procurement rhythm that a contractor should not ignore.
Just as the seasons determine a farmers schedule of planting
and harvesting, the federal fiscal year imposes its own schedule
on contractors. A vendor needs to use the autumn and winter to
meet with agency personnel, learn about their needs, and get the
vendors goods and services included in the agencys
procurement plans for this year and in its budget for next years
acquisitions. In the spring and summer, the contractor needs to
concentrate on meeting with agency personnel to close the deals
on the table and get orders.