July's Marketing Communications Contract Awards

Heading into the middle of FY23 Q4, we're continuing to see a steady volume of contract opportunities. In July, we saw a handful of competitive contract awards:

  • Booz Allen won a $10.1M contract at HHS' Office of Research on Women's Health for communications, outreach and logistics support

  • Schatz Publishing Group won a $6.1M contract with HUD for professional editing, formatting, and publication preproduction services

  • BLN24 won a $4.4M contract at Commerce's National Telecommunications and Information Administration for a website redesign

  • Aptive Resources won a $4.4M competitive task order on VECTOR at the VA for strategic communication, marketing and branding support, media relations, outreach and social media support services

  • Sensis Agency won a $2.3M contract with the Census Bureau for digital media and marketing support services

  • Palladian Partners won a competitive task order on PICS II for seed strategic marketing materials valued at $270K

  • Red Carrot won a $263K contract with Federal Highway Administration for recruiting support services

  • KDR Communications won a $202K contract at the SBA for a strategic communication plan supporting the National Women's Business Council

And, special congrats to our friends at TDW+Co for winning their first prime contract! They won a $250K contract at Federal Communications Commission for AANHPI Transcreation. 

Congratulations to Booz Allen, Schatz Publishing, BLN24, Aptive Resources, Sensis, Palladian Partners, Red Carrot, KDR Communications and TDW+Co.!

If you have any exciting news to share -- contract wins, new senior hires, and more -- feel free to reach out. We'd love to feature it in our emails to the marketing communications community. We are continually busy with our business development services and we're continuing to see a constant flow of agency consolidations. If you're looking to grow, buy, or sell, feel free to reach out.

Wishing you continued success as we get further into the "busy season".