3. Guest Columns

September 13, 2007

Cracking the Defense Market: Service-Disabled Veterans

by Joel Katzman

The defense market is a difficult target for a start-up. Very long sales lead times, security issues that delay or prevent public referenceability, and a conservative buying culture are formidable obstacles for any VC-backed firm. On the other hand, US military spending is high, and the life-and-death nature of the field can help drive early adoption at price points that wouldn't be viable in the commercial markets. Some sectors like biotech have been successful in attracting federal funding, due to the structure of those markets. Elsewhere, a venture-backed firm needs to look at shortcuts if it plans to make the military market one of its targets. One potential shortcut involves service-disabled veterans.

Veterans as a class as known as stable and often skilled employees, and many bring relevant contacts within the military. since 9/11, over 24,000 US service members have wounded or injured on duty, from minor injuries that healed quickly to permanent disability. In October 2004, President Bush signed an executive order that required agencies to implement a strategy designed to reach the government-wide 3% goal for contract awards to service-disabled, veteran-owned businesses. From 2003-2005, that value had doubled to $514 million a year, or about 0.3% of total contracting dollars. It had doubled again to about $1 billion by July 2007, but the 3% goal remains a long way away.

 In response, efforts are underway to narrow the gap - including a stronger focus on sub-contracting partnerships with larger firms, who may represent a future acquisition exit. Of course, smaller firms can also avail themselves of these same contracting partnership benefits. Defense Industry Daily's updated article Service-Disabled Veterans Face Contracting Opportunity, Challenges offers more information, and a wide variety of resources for businesses where 51% or more of ownership falls to a service-disabled veteran or veterans.

Joe Katzman lives near San Jose; he is the Editor-in-Chief at Defense Industry Daily