Key Personnel Requirements Related to Government Solicitations

Government solicitations for services frequently include a requirement to identify key personnel who will work on the awarded contract. If so, offerors may be required to also include resumes and letters of commitment for each person proposed in the specified key personnel position(s), and the proposed key personnel usually will be considered as part of the solicitation’s evaluation criteria.
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OTHER ON-DEMAND WEBINARS

SaaS in Government: Insider Insights to Cloud Success

Accela Inc.

Governments today understand IT modernization means moving to the cloud. Yet with an abundance of cloud solutions available, it's easy to get overwhelmed when evaluating options. In this on-demand webinar, hear Microsoft and Accela experts discuss and debunk common myths tied to cloud adoption, and get insights on how governments can more effectively leverage Software-as-a-Service (SaaS).
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Office 365 in UK Local Government

sitsgroup

UK Local Government organisations are increasingly looking to modernise with the adoption of cloud services. In fact, research from Gartner suggests that within the next five years 80% of government business processes will have undergone significant digital transformation. However, security and compliance remain major barrier to adoption for public sector IT buyers.
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A New Government DNA: Rethinking Processes from the Ground Up

As state and local government processes have grown increasingly complex over the past several years, the public sector has seen a widening efficiency gap. Organizations keep acquiring new solutions to streamline workflows, but the machinery of government just gets more and more complicated. Technologies aimed at improving operations just add new layers of complexity and frustration.
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Guidelines and Considerations When Terminating Government Contracts

lorman

Terminations are the not-so-happy endings to construction contracts. A termination occurs when the owner decides to stop a project before it is complete. This is a right that lies solely with the owner unless otherwise specified in the contract - at best, a contractor can abandon a contract if the owner breaches it.
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