Datadobi Gets Added to the US Government’s SEWP Contract List

Datadobi Gets Added to the US Government’s SEWP Contract List

We’re pleased to announce that we have recently achieved a significant objective: to get listed as a GSA contractor by being named to the United States’ federal list of SEWP vendors.

What is SEWP?

Solutions for Enterprise-Wide Procurement (SEWP) is a government acquisition contract program authorized by the US Office of Management and Budget (OMB). SEWP is managed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to guide how the government purchases technology.

The SEWP program, used by 87 cabinet-level agencies and commissions, is designed to inform the process for vendors looking to purchase IT equipment and services from authorized vendors and their associated resellers. With the growth of unstructured data, government agencies and contractors are in need of reliable software solutions that will help them reach IT modernization goals. Our software can manage those large-scale migrations that come with system refreshes.

How will we benefit?

Achieving the SEWP-authorized status gives Datadobi entry into the massive market of all the federal agencies in the US government. Being on the list makes us an option for federal government resellers, and it makes our enterprise-class software available to agencies and contractors as they transition to new storage technologies.

The US federal government budgets roughly $100 billion annually for IT services and operates more than 12,000 data centers across the country. It’s clear this contract will open up many more opportunities for us.

What one of our partners said…

“Datadobi is one of the most reliable and sought-after data migration sources on the market,” said Charles Bass, VP of Business Development at Lifeboat Distribution. “The federal government is one of the richest verticals for technological adaptation; Datadobi’s appointment as a vendor reflects the government’s commitment to offering the best technology available to bring its agencies into the modern era.”