Stop Work Orders – What it Means for Government Contractors

Government contractors must stop work immediately when they receive a stop work order (SWO) from a contracting officer. What are the next steps? There are several processes to follow, including one to aid in the recovery of additional costs incurred as a result of the SWO.

2019-04-16T19:12:03-04:00April 16, 2019|Categories: Government Contracting|Tags: |

Allocating General and Administrative Costs to Your Advantage

The government cannot dictate the number of indirect rates you have or how you apply them but they can cite you for non-compliance in the allocation of your indirect costs. Learn how best to allocate your costs based on the type of expense.

2019-04-02T20:12:40-04:00April 2, 2019|Categories: Accounting, Government Contracting|Tags: , |

Developing an Indirect Cost Allocation Plan

Was your rate structure used to allocate indirect costs to your products or services established to satisfy your accounting software? Was it dictated by your customer? Did you set it up because you thought that is what was needed to win contracts? Did you get it from a book or seminar, or even Google? If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, you need to read further.

2019-03-19T15:29:09-04:00February 7, 2019|Categories: Accounting, Government Contracting|Tags: , , |

Four Ways Government Contractors Can Improve Their Accounting Systems

As government contractors grow to gain new clients and hire more staff to perform the obligations, the accounting system must grow too. Small and emerging government contractors can properly account for costs incurred on government cost-type contracts without overcomplicating the process.

2018-12-21T15:02:55-05:00October 24, 2018|Categories: Government Contracting|Tags: , |

Identifying Unallowable Costs – Lodging and Subsistence Costs

The Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) is noticing many government contractors are inaccurately recording lodging and subsistence travel costs and it’s become an area of “low hanging fruit” for DCAA auditors. What are the unallowable expenses under DCAA guidelines?

2019-12-03T09:12:40-05:00September 28, 2018|Categories: Government Contracting, Tax: Business|Tags: , |

How Government Contractors Should Prepare for a Government Shutdown

This is a follow-up to previous discussions about a potential Federal government shutdown that was avoided through a continuing resolution restricting expenditures.   The threat hinges [...]

2018-10-18T16:01:04-04:00December 20, 2017|Categories: Government Contracting|Tags: |

Due Diligence Should Be More Than Numbers

Whether it is to gain access to new technologies or increase resources and market presence, more companies, large and small are considering a merger or acquisition. 

Go to Top

As Internet Explorer will discontinue browser security updates by August of 2021, this site is best viewed using Google Chrome, Safari or Microsoft Edge.

Click to Continue