Florida Trend | Florida's Business Authority

Selling to the Government

Resources

MyFloridaMarketPlace.com
dms.myflorida.com/mfmp
(866) 352-3776

Office of Supplier Diversity
osd.dms.state.fl.us
(850) 487-0915

Florida Minority Supplier Development Council

fmsdc.org
(407) 404-6700

Florida Small Business Development Centers Procurement Technical Assistance Center Program (PTACs) www.fptac.org
(850) 473-7806
Boca Raton/Fort Lauderdale
(561) 862-4780
Fort Myers (239) 745-3708
Fort Walton Beach (850) 301-3514
Jacksonville (904) 620-2053
Orlando (407) 420-4850
Pensacola (850) 474-2633
Tampa (813) 905-5800

Women's Business Centers
Delray Beach (866) 353-3790
flwbc.org
Jacksonville (904) 366-6640
myjaxchamber.com
Melbourne (321) 674-7007
wbc.fit.edu

WomenBiz.gov
www.womenbiz.gov

Florida Black Business Investment Corporations
Tallahassee (850) 552-3544
Daytona Beach (386) 258-7520
Fort Lauderdale (954) 587-3755
metrobroward.org,
Jacksonville (904) 634-0543
Miami (305) 693-3550
bacfundingcorp.com
Orlando (407) 649-4780
bbif.com
Tampa/St. Petersburg (813) 425-2043 and (727) 826-5785
tampabaybbic.com,
West Palm Beach (561) 845-8055

Hispanic Business Initiative Fund
Orlando — hbifflorida.org
(407) 428-5872

MyFloridaMarketPlace

The state of Florida's eProcurement system, MyFloridaMarketPlace, is designed to streamline transactions between vendors and state government entities that purchase goods and services. Businesses register online. Also businesses that want to apply for minority business enterprise (MBE) certification can do so as part of the online registration process.

As of Sept. 30, 2009, more than 123,000 vendors, including more than 42,000 minority vendors, had registered with MyFloridaMarketPlace, which is part of the Florida Department of Management Services. And 32 state agencies using the system had placed more than 804,000 purchase orders and spent more than $7.5 billion.

Help for Women and Minorities

» Women's Business Centers
This nationwide network of centers, which are partly sponsored by the U.S. Small Business Administration, helps women start and run successful businesses.

» WomenBiz.gov
The National Women's Business Council, a bipartisan federal advisory group, sponsors this site. It is designed to help women-owned businesses sell to the federal government.

» Florida Black Business Investment Corporations
This consortium of eight regional organizations provides financial and technical assistance to African-American-owned and other minority businesses. The BBIC helps to finance startups and expansions. Financing typically ranges from $50,000 to $300,000. The Black Business Investment Fund in Orlando is overseeing the state-funded Economic Gardening Business Pilot Loan Program, which was created in 2009 to provide loans of $50,000 to $250,000.

» Additional Assistance
Other entities that can provide helpful information for Florida's minority-owned businesses include the Black Business Investment Board, Hispanic Business Initiative Fund and the Florida Small Business Development Center Network.

Kandi Stirman
Kandi Stirman, president, owner Miami Cordage
[Photo: Daniel Portnoy]

» Connections

Kandi Stirman's family business, Miami Cordage, has been manufacturing soft rope, wire rope, chain and synthetic webbing since 1960. The products are used in the marine, aircraft and building industries and are made in south Florida. Miami Cordage sells its rope and wire across the U.S. and Latin America.

In recent years, much of the company's focus has been government contracting. While the company counts the U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Navy and NASA as clients, learning the ins and outs of government procurement has been a challenge. Says Stirman, "It's a lot of networking."

Florida's online MyFloridaMarketPlace makes finding contracts easier, but Stirman warns other small businesses that there is still a tremendous amount of legwork that goes into sifting through potential projects, working with prime contractors and, if applicable, getting certified as a minority-owned business. "It's easier than it used to be," she says, adding, "At least there is something to look at on the computer."

Stirman says that rope and many other specialized products typically are not mentioned in requests for proposal even though the items must be used by prime contractors to complete the work. She calls them "hidden products" and says that to participate in a contract she has to figure out who might be bidding and then arrange to work with them as a subcontractor.

Stirman's company is an attractive partner for prime contractors because, as a women-owned business, it has state certification as a minority business enterprise, or MBE. Some municipalities accept Florida's MBE certification, but other localities and agencies, such as the South Florida Water Management District, have their own programs. There's an ongoing stream of paperwork, says Stirman, who is currently working on getting federal certification as an 8(a) disadvantaged business because of her location in an Historically Underutilized Business Zone, or HUBZone.

Stirman's latest frustration is that many government agencies have no qualms about buying from overseas suppliers rather than at home. One exception was the 2009 federal economic stimulus legislation that required using U.S. suppliers.

Stirman has been able to keep her 30 employees on the job even with 2009 sales down 27% from 2008's peak of $4.7 million. "We're still OK," she says. "We've managed to keep afloat."