What Is a Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB)?
A Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB) is a small firm 51%+ owned by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals. Meaning, eligibility, and the 12% federal goal explained.
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A Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB) is a small firm 51%+ owned by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals. Meaning, eligibility, and the 12% federal goal explained.
WOSB vs EDWOSB explained: a WOSB is a women-owned small business; an EDWOSB is the economically disadvantaged subset. Eligibility, certification, and which set-asides each can win.
How to build a one-page capability statement that wins attention from federal contracting officers and prime partners. Required sections, common mistakes, and a downloadable template.
A clear, practitioner-level guide to the major federal small-business set-aside programs — eligibility, benefits, certification paths, and how to decide which ones to pursue.
Step-by-step SAM.gov registration walkthrough for new federal contractors. Entity validation, UEI, CAGE, NAICS selection, assertions, reps and certs — and the most common rejection fixes.
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