GovCon Bid and Proposal Insights
GovCon Bid and Proposal Insights
Strategic Workforce for Intelligence, Finance & Technical Administration
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Get a quick breakdown of the FBI’s upcoming $600M SWIFT BPA opportunity under a Sources Sought notice. In this episode, we explore key service areas like financial management, program support, intelligence analysis, and workforce development plus what this early-stage opportunity means for contractors preparing to enter the pipeline.
Listen now to stay ahead and position your business before the official solicitation drops
Contact ProposalHelper at sales@proposalhelper.com to find similar opportunities and help you build a realistic and winning pipeline.
Shocking شرط For Admin Jobs
SPEAKER_01Imagine you're uh applying for a standard office job, right? Okay. You know, maybe you're gonna do some strategic planning or um some routine financial auditing. Pretty normal stuff. Exactly. But before human resources will even glance at your resume, you have to legally agree to let them search your house or your car.
SPEAKER_00Oh wow.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, at any time. And uh completely without a warrant.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell That is um quite the onboarding process.
SPEAKER_01Right. Well, today we have our hands on a really fascinating piece of source material. It's a dense draft request for quotation and RFQ from 2021. Uh-huh. And it is straight from the FBI's professional services acquisition unit. So essentially, we are looking at the exact blueprint of how the Federal Bureau of Investigation hires its administrative staff.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell That's right. And specifically, uh this is a solicitation for what they call administrative and professional support services. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01Which sounds very dry. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_00It does. I mean, at first glance, an RFQ like this might just look like, you know, impenetrable government procurement paperwork.
SPEAKER_01Trevor Burrus, Jr.: Yeah, just endless acronyms.
SPEAKER_00Trevor Burrus Exactly. But if you read between the lines, it is an absolute masterclass in risk mitigation and honestly colossal scale project management.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Okay, let's unpack this. Because our mission for this deep dive today is to decode the labyrinthine bureaucratic security and logistical hurdles that a private company absolutely must clear.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell Just to provide administrative support.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Yes. Just to provide support to the FBI. I mean, we aren't talking about hiring the special agents in the sharpsuits who kick down doors, right? No, not at all. We are talking about hiring the business process analysts, the financial auditors, the daily administrative staff who literally just keep the lights on. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_00Right. The people pushing the paper.
SPEAKER_01Trevor Burrus But getting that job, it is an unbelievable gauntlet. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
hat A Blanket Purchase Agreement Is
SPEAKER_00It really is. I mean, before we even get into how a company wins this contract, we have to establish the sheer scale of the job itself.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Which is massive.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Completely massive. The document is setting up what is known in government contracting as a blanket purchase agreement.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Okay, wait. Let's pause on blanket purchase agreement for a second.
SPEAKER_00Sure.
SPEAKER_01Trevor Burrus For anyone outside of federal contracting, what does that actually mean mechanically? I mean, are they guaranteeing a company a certain amount of money up front?
SPEAKER_00That's a great question. No. A blanket purchase agreement or BPA is essentially like establishing a corporate charge account.
SPEAKER_01Okay. A charge account.
SPEAKER_00Right. So the government sets all the strict rules, the performance metrics, the baseline pricing with a contractor.
SPEAKER_01No.
SPEAKER_00But they don't actually buy anything yet.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell So no money changes hands at that point.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell Exactly. They only swipe the card, which means they issue specific task orders when they actually need the work done in a specific location.
SPEAKER_01Got it.
SPEAKER_00And um the geographical footprint they might need work in is staggering. I mean, this the scope of this BPA covers all 56 FBI field offices. Wow. Yeah, and their resident agencies and all the headquarters divisions.
SPEAKER_0156 field offices. And the text specifically notes locations ranging from like Huntsville, Alabama to Pocatello, Idaho. Right. All the way to the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. So a contractor has to be prepared to deploy staff basically anywhere.
SPEAKER_00Anywhere at all.
SPEAKER_01But it's not just about where the work happens, is it? It's about the intense pressure cooker in which it happens.
SPEAKER_00Oh, absolutely.
SPEAKER_01I mean, the document explicitly points out the quote, high public profile of the FBI.
hy Oversight Makes Perfection Mandatory
SPEAKER_00Yes. And because of that high public profile, the performance of these administrative contractors faces unyielding scrutiny, both internal and external.
SPEAKER_01It's intense.
SPEAKER_00It is. The document actually lists the entities watching over this contract, and it is a heavy-hitting roster.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell, who are we talking about here?
SPEAKER_00Well, internally you have FBI Executive Management.
SPEAKER_01Makes sense.
SPEAKER_00But externally. You have the Department of Justice, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Office of Management of Budget, the DOJ Office of Inspector General, and Congressional Oversight Committees.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Okay. I mean if you are managing a team or a project in the private sector right now, you might have, you know, a regional director or a VP breathing down your neck.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_01But this, I liken it to hiring the stage crew for the most complex high-stakes theater production in the world.
SPEAKER_00That's a good way to put it.
SPEAKER_01Because if the lighting guy makes a mistake or someone trips over a wire, the United States Congress demands a hearing.
SPEAKER_00Exactly.
SPEAKER_01Every single piece of paper filed, every business process analyzed is done with the entire federal government looking over your shoulder.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell If we connect this to the bigger picture in the realm of national security, administrative perfection essentially is operational success.
SPEAKER_01That's a really interesting point.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, because a paperwork error or um a misallocated budget or a poorly managed facility in this context isn't just a typo.
SPEAKER_01Right. It's not a minor corporate blunder.
SPEAKER_00No, it is a potential national security vulnerability. I mean, the FBI's mission is to protect and defend the United States against terrorist and foreign intelligence threats.
SPEAKER_01The highest possible stakes.
SPEAKER_00Right. And they simply cannot execute that mission if the underlying administrative machinery is broken or insecure.
SPEAKER_01Which actually brings us to a fascinating hurdle. The security apparatus itself.
op Secret Clearance Before You Bid
SPEAKER_00Oh, the security is intense.
SPEAKER_01Because the spotlight is so incredibly bright, a company can't just walk on to this stage. You need the ultimate backstage pass before the FBI will even allow you to submit a bid.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_01We are talking about the top secret facilities clearance.
SPEAKER_00This is a critical, truly uncompromising point in the document. To even submit a quote, the prime contractor must possess a top secret facilities clearance, or FCL, at the exact time of quote, submission.
SPEAKER_01At the exact time.
SPEAKER_00Yes. And it is evaluated on a strict pass-fail basis.
SPEAKER_01And they put this in bold text in the document. Absolutely no interim facility clearances will be accepted.
SPEAKER_00None.
SPEAKER_01So what does no interim mean mechanically for a business trying to break into this space?
SPEAKER_00Well, it basically means the door is slammed shut for newcomers.
SPEAKER_01Really?
SPEAKER_00Yeah, if you don't already operate at this level, you're out. Getting a top secret facilities clearance is a grueling, incredibly expensive process.
SPEAKER_01I can imagine.
SPEAKER_00It involves deep investigations into a company's corporate structure, any foreign ownership, their financial stability, and all their key management personnel.
SPEAKER_01So it takes a while.
SPEAKER_00It can take many months, sometimes even years.
SPEAKER_01Wow.
SPEAKER_00And an interim clearance just means the government has done a preliminary check. They haven't found any major red flags yet. So they let you start some basic work while the full investigation finishes.
SPEAKER_01Okay, so by explicitly banning interim clearances, the FBI is basically saying They're saying we will only talk to companies that have already been fully vetted. Fully adjudicated.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. Companies that are currently operating at the highest levels of trusted secrecy.
SPEAKER_01And it doesn't even stop with the prime contractor.
SPEAKER_00No, it doesn't.
SPEAKER_01I noticed all subcontractors must meet these requirements too. They have to submit an acquisition risk questionnaire and a key management personnel list.
SPEAKER_00Yep.
SPEAKER_01But you know, the personnel requirements are what really caught my eye.
SPEAKER_00Oh, the individual requirements.
SPEAKER_01Yes. Beyond the standard background checks, the contractor persona have to complete non-disclosure agreements, which sure makes sense for classified work.
SPEAKER_00Right, standard procedure.
SPEAKER_01But then the document stipulates that they must also sign warrantless search agreements.
SPEAKER_00Yes, they do.
SPEAKER_01Wait, I mean, from a private sector perspective, this sounds extreme. To do business process analysis, these civilian employees have to sign away their Fourth Amendment rights.
SPEAKER_00Precisely. And what this reveals is the completely uncompromising nature of the FBI's security pasture.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00They are outsourcing the labor, yes, but they absolutely refuse to outsource the security.
SPEAKER_01But why go to that extreme just for administrative staff?
SPEAKER_00Because of the environment they're walking into, the FBI is bringing civilian contractors into facilities where highly sensitive, classified information is processed every single day.
SPEAKER_01Right. The data is everywhere.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. A bad actor or, you know, even just a careless employee plugging in the wrong flash drive could cause irreparable damage. Aaron Powell A huge breach. So by requiring warrantless search agreements, the FBI is maintaining the authority to instantly investigate any potential security breach.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Instantly. Without a judge.
SPEAKER_00Right. Whether it's searching an employee's workspace, their vehicle in the parking lot, or their person. Without waiting for a warrant, it allows for immediate threat mitigation. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01That is a profound trade-off. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_00It really is.
SPEAKER_01You are sacrificing a significant degree of personal liberty for the privilege and the paycheck of supporting the national security apparatus.
SPEAKER_00Definitely.
SPEAKER_01So okay, let's play this out. Let's say your company has the top secret facilities clearance. Okay. Your employees are fully cleared, they've signed the NDAs, they've agreed to the warrantless searches.
SPEAKER_00They're in the door.
he Eight Volume Proposal Gauntlet
SPEAKER_01Right. You have the backstage pass. Now, how do you actually win this blanket purchase agreement? Spoiler alert for the listener, it is not about being the cheapest.
SPEAKER_00Not at all. I mean, the proposal process itself is a monumental undertaking. Quoters are required to submit eight distinct, highly detailed volumes of information just to be considered.
SPEAKER_01Eight volumes. To give you a sense of the scale of this, volume one is the facilities clearance evidence, volume two is past performance, volume three is the management plan. Volume four is the price. Volume five contains security documents, and volume six is an organizational conflict of interest mitigation plan.
SPEAKER_00That's a big one.
SPEAKER_01I want to look at that one specifically. An organizational conflict of interest. Does that mean a company can't be hired to audit a financial system that a different branch of their own company actually built?
SPEAKER_00Spot on. That is exactly what it means. Okay. The government requires contractors to be entirely objective. So if your company provides strategic advice to the FBI on what software to buy, your company cannot then turn around and bid to sell that software to the FBI.
SPEAKER_01That makes total sense.
SPEAKER_00Right. So the OCI mitigation plan is this complex legal document where the contractor proves they have firewalls in place to prevent those exact conflicts.
SPEAKER_01So different divisions can't talk to each other.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. And the sheer cost of compiling these eight volumes, you know, the lawyers, the proposal writers, the security officers, it's an enormous barrier to entry.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell, so if I'm looking at these eight volumes, it seems to me like this isn't just an application. No. It's a stress test. They are intentionally making the paperwork painful to weed out companies that don't have their act together.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell That is a very accurate way to look at it. And it ties directly into the evaluation methodology the government uses here.
SPEAKER_01Which is what?
SPEAKER_00It's called a best value trade-off. In this specific RFQ, the non-price factors, meaning volume two, past performance, and volume three, the management plan, are significantly more important than volume four, the price.
SPEAKER_01So what does this all mean for the company bidding? It's not a reverse option.
SPEAKER_00Definitely not.
SPEAKER_01You aren't just trying to undercut the competition's hourly rate. It's like a corporate decaf one, where your reputation and your operational readiness matter vastly more than your price tag.
SPEAKER_00What's fascinating here is how clearly this illustrates a fundamental truth about high-stakes environments. Which is predictability is exponentially more valuable than cost savings. The government views a suspiciously low bid not as a bargain, but as a massive operational risk.
SPEAKER_01That makes sense. Why are you so cheap?
SPEAKER_00Exactly. The FBI would much rather pay a premium for a contractor with a proven flawless track record than risk an administrative collapse from a budget bidder. The cost of a failed process in the FBI is simply too high.
PAR Scores And The Mock Task Order
SPEAKER_01So let's talk about how they actually prove that flawless track record. You mentioned volume two, past performance.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_01I imagine they don't just want a glossy marketing brochure listing people you've worked for.
SPEAKER_00Oh, absolutely not. The requirements for past performance are remarkably rigorous. So first, there is a strict recency standard. The work must have been performed within the five-year period preceding the RFQ release.
SPEAKER_01Okay, so if your greatest success was six years ago, it doesn't count. Wow.
SPEAKER_00Then there is the relevancy assessment. The government is looking for specific demonstrative experience in things like financial management, auditing, strategic planning, business process analysis.
SPEAKER_01It has to be an exact match.
SPEAKER_00Right. Administrative support of a similar size and scope.
SPEAKER_01And they evaluate the quality of that past performance using something called contractor performance assessment reports or CPRs. How do those actually work mechanically? Are they just like Yelp reviews for government contractors?
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell That's a great analogy. They are essentially highly formalized, heavily scrutinized Yelp reviews, yes. Okay. At the end of every year, on a federal contract, the government contracting officer writes a CPAR evaluating the contractor.
SPEAKER_01On what?
SPEAKER_00On cost control, schedule, and quality.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00And they rate the contractor on a scale.
SPEAKER_01What's the scale?
SPEAKER_00It goes from unsatisfactory to marginal to satisfactory to very good to exceptional.
SPEAKER_01Okay.
SPEAKER_00The FBI pulls these reports directly from a government database. Yeah. And they want to see that you were rated exceptional.
SPEAKER_01Meaning you were perfect.
SPEAKER_00Meaning you exceeded requirements to the government's benefit with very few minor problems. And they distill all of this into a performance confidence assessment.
SPEAKER_01And the rating scale for that confidence assessment ranges from high confidence down to no confidence.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_01And obviously you need that high confidence rating to even stay in the game.
SPEAKER_00You do.
SPEAKER_01But wait, what if your past performance is stellar? Do they just hand you the contract? No. They actually make you prove you can do the job right now, on the spot, with mock task order.
SPEAKER_00Yes, this is subfactor two of the management plan, and it is a fascinating hurdle.
SPEAKER_01How does it work?
SPEAKER_00You are given a hypothetical but highly realistic scenario. For instance, the prompt might essentially be the FBI suddenly needs 15 cleared financial analysts in our Pocatello, Idaho facility next month. Go. Just go. Yep. You have to provide a detailed technical approach and a comprehensive staffing plan to fulfill that exact order.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell And the kicker here is the timeline.
SPEAKER_00The timeline is brutal.
SPEAKER_01You have to prove in writing how you will ramp up to full staffing within 30 days of the award.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_01I mean, finding 15 people with top secret clearances who are willing to move to Idaho in 30 days sounds nearly impossible.
SPEAKER_00Well, that 30-day ramp-up is the ultimate stress test.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00It proves whether a company actually has a deep bench of cleared, qualified personnel ready to deploy. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01Or if they're faking it.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. Or if they're just ghost bidding, which means submitting a proposal and hoping they can somehow recruit and clear people after they win the money.
SPEAKER_01Oh wow.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. In the national security space, the mission is happening right now. The government cannot afford to wait six months for a contractor to find and clear staff.
SPEAKER_01Okay. So you run this decathlon.
SPEAKER_00Yep.
SPEAKER_01You prove your past performance is spotless, you ace the mock task order, your organizational conflict of interest firewalls are flawless, and your top secret clearances are locked in.
SPEAKER_00You get it all.
SPEAKER_01You win the best value bid. Congratulations.
SPEAKER_00Time to celebrate.
SPEAKER_01You would think at this point the FBI would trust you, right?
SPEAKER_00You would think.
nvoicing Travel Rules And Asset Tracking
SPEAKER_01But the execution phase, detailed in this document, is a complete labyrinth of micromanagement. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_00Oh, the dealy reality of executing this contract leaves very little room for corporate autonomy. The FBI dictates highly specific operational rules that contractors must follow to the absolute letter.
SPEAKER_01Let's start with something basic. Getting paid. You can't just email a PDF invoice to your contracting officer and expect a direct deposit, can you?
SPEAKER_00No, absolutely not. The document actually states that emails will be rejected outright. Just rejected. Invoicing must be done through a secure web-based system provided by the Department of the Treasury.
SPEAKER_01Right, the invoice processing platform or IPP.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. You have to register your company, assign a dedicated administrator, take training tutorials, and submit every single line item through this portal.
SPEAKER_01That seems like so much overhead.
SPEAKER_00It is, but that is a prime example of the broader federal push for electronic appliance standardization and auditability.
SPEAKER_01Right.
SPEAKER_00But the micromanagement extends far beyond just how you submit a bill. Consider the travel regulations.
SPEAKER_01This part blew my mind.
SPEAKER_00Contractor personnel are held to the exact same austere standards as government personnel under the Joint Federal Travel Regulation.
SPEAKER_01Right. So imagine you are a senior strategic consultant.
SPEAKER_00Yep.
SPEAKER_01You are used to corporate perks, and you are flying out to advise the FBI. The travel rules dictate you are strictly limited to renting compact or economy cars.
SPEAKER_00No luxury SUVs.
SPEAKER_01None. Your hotel stays must adhere absolutely to the government per diem rates, which, let's be honest, are often quite low depending on the city.
SPEAKER_00Very low.
SPEAKER_01And if the per diem rate isn't available, you have to complete a formal cost comparison and get it approved by the government before you even pack your bags.
SPEAKER_00It's true. And it drills right down to where you park your car. Yes. The document explicitly mandates utilizing the cheapest form of parking at airport locations.
SPEAKER_01So no valet.
SPEAKER_00No valet.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00It means you are taking the shuttle from the long-term or extended economy lots.
SPEAKER_01That's wild.
SPEAKER_00And if you want to buy an airline ticket, it must be the lowest possible rate. Any deviation requires documented justification and prior approval. The government is ensuring that not a single taxpayer dollar is wasted on contractor comfort.
SPEAKER_01None. But here's where it gets really interesting to me: the property management requirements. Contractors are accountable for government property, obviously. But the document specifically notes that you have to track individual components of IT systems, like external hard drives, monitors, scanners, and modems, even if they cost under$1,000. Yep. Wait, from a business perspective, the administrative hours spent constantly tracking a$50 external hard drive will quickly exceed the cost of the drive itself.
SPEAKER_00Oh, absolutely.
SPEAKER_01So why undergo that level of bureaucratic friction?
SPEAKER_00Because you have to separate the financial value of the hardware from the operational value of the data.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Okay, I'll tack that.
SPEAKER_00Well, an untracked external hard drive in an FBI facility is an unfathomable data exfiltration risk. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01Oh, like stealing secrets.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. The fact that the hard drive only costs$50 is completely irrelevant.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Because of what's on it.
SPEAKER_00Right. The classified intelligence or the personal data of FBI personnel it could potentially hold is priceless. Therefore, the tracking mechanism must be absolute.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Ross Powell Regardless of the administrative friction it causes the contractor.
SPEAKER_00Regardless.
SPEAKER_01Okay, I can see the logic there. The hardware is cheap, but the data is priceless.
SPEAKER_00Exactly.
andemic Continuity And Final Takeaways
SPEAKER_01But then um we hit section 8.7.
SPEAKER_00The pandemic clause.
SPEAKER_01Yes. The continuing contract performance during a pandemic influenza or other national emergency clause.
SPEAKER_00This is a heavy one.
SPEAKER_01The document states that during a pandemic or a national emergency, the contractor workforce will likely experience high absenteeism, just like the federal workforce. But the government expects the contractors to make a reasonable effort to keep performance at an acceptable level.
SPEAKER_00Yes, they do.
SPEAKER_01They mandate cross-training workers as backups, implementing telework, establishing emergency communication processes. And furthermore, if the government goes into a furlough status and shuts down, contractors cannot just keep working and billing unless specifically approved.
SPEAKER_00Right.
SPEAKER_01I mean, are these private companies basically expected to be more resilient than the government itself?
SPEAKER_00In many ways, yes. And this is a brilliant, albeit really demanding contracting strategy.
SPEAKER_01How so?
SPEAKER_00When the FBI signs this blanket purchase agreement, they aren't just buying administrative support hours. They're buying continuity of operations. Right. They are effectively offloading the profound risk of business interruption onto the private sector.
SPEAKER_01Wow.
SPEAKER_00The government is telling the contractor it is your responsibility to figure out how to keep our operations running, even if a global health crisis or a national emergency shuts the world down.
SPEAKER_01You figure it out.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. You must have the redundancies and the IT infrastructure in place to ensure we do not miss a beat.
SPEAKER_01But the margin squeeze for the contractor there is intense.
SPEAKER_00Oh, massive.
SPEAKER_01The contractor has to absorb the cost of building that resilience into their business model. They have to train backups for every critical position.
SPEAKER_00Which costs money.
SPEAKER_01Right. Which means you are paying a strategic planner to also know how to do basic administrative processing just in case the admin gets sick. Yep. You have to set up telework systems that meet FBI security standards. And if the government facility is closed for a snowstorm or a furlough, the contractor personnel can't bill for that time unless they are given a window of up to 30 days to make up the lost hours. There is no expectation of reimbursement for time not worked.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. The FBI is locking down absolute cost predictability while maximizing their own operational stability. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01It's completely one-sided.
SPEAKER_00It is. If the contractor anticipates not being able to perform during an emergency, it is their contractual responsibility to notify the contracting officer immediately.
SPEAKER_01And fix it.
SPEAKER_00And help the government develop a strategy to fill the gaps. Yeah. The burden of solving the crisis falls entirely on the contractor's shoulders. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01It is an incredible amount of pressure just to provide support services.
SPEAKER_00It really is.
SPEAKER_01So uh to recap this intense journey we've just taken through the administrative underworld of the FBI.
SPEAKER_00It's been a journey.
SPEAKER_01The scope of the work is staggering, covering operations from Puerto Rico to Idaho under the constant, watchful eyes of Congress and the Director of National Intelligence.
SPEAKER_00Right. The security requirements are uncompromising, demanding Top secret facility clearances on a pass-fail basis before you even bid.
SPEAKER_01Yep.
SPEAKER_00And requiring civilian workers to sign away their rights against warrantless searches just to walk through the door.
SPEAKER_01And the bidding war is a corporate decathlon where an eight-volume proposal, strict organizational conflict of interest firewalls, and a live mock task order prove your worth.
SPEAKER_00Because the FBI cares vastly more about your proven high confidence past performance than your ability to offer a cheap hourly rate.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. And finally, the day-to-day reality is a labyrinth of micromanagement. Truly. From navigating treasury department, invoicing portals to taking the shuttle bus from the cheapest airport parking lots, all while being contractually obligated to maintain operations and absorb the costs during a national emergency.
SPEAKER_00It is exhausting just breaking it down.
SPEAKER_01It really is. So, you know, the next time you feel overwhelmed by a job application.
SPEAKER_00Or a performance review.
SPEAKER_01Right. Or you are stressing out over a client pitch or some compliance form at work. Just remember the eight-volume top secret gauntlet of the FBI Administrative and Professional Support Services RFQ.
SPEAKER_00It puts things in perspective.
SPEAKER_01It does. I mean, your Tuesday morning status meeting probably isn't going to trigger a congressional oversight hearing.
SPEAKER_00That is a very comforting perspective to keep in mind.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00And um, it actually leaves us with one final lingering question to mull over.
SPEAKER_01Oh. What's that?
SPEAKER_00Well, it's this astonishing level of scrutiny, background checking, and operational micromanagement is what it takes just to secure the contract for the administrative staff.
SPEAKER_01The people who just file the paperwork and audit the finances.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. This is for them. What on earth does the vetting process look like for the people actually kicking down the doors?