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pdfFedConnect® 3.0
Ready, Set, Go!
Using FedConnect
Before You Register .................................... 3
Registering in FedConnect .......................... 4
Signing In ..................................................... 7
Navigating the System ................................ 9
Searching in FedConnect .......................... 13
Want the US federal government to buy your
products or services? Seeking grants or assistance
funding?
FedConnect® can help! This one-stop website with opportunities for
federal contracts, grants (and other assistance funding) bridges the gap
between government agencies and vendors and grants applicants. It
streamlines the process of doing business with government.
Opportunities—The Lay of the Land ......... 14
Types of Opportunities........................ 14
The Opportunities Pages ..................... 14
Opportunities in Action............................. 21
Receiving an Award................................... 34
Sending/Receiving Messages .................... 37
Managing Your Account
Company Profile........................................ 39
Through this portal you can review opportunities and receive awards all
in a secure, auditable, open channel of communication with the
government. And you can create teams in FedConnect to help you
manage it all.
This guide is designed to help you get up and running as quickly as possible.
First, we cover registration, which is fast, easy, and FREE! We also show
you opportunities, making submissions, and receiving awards.
And of course, if you ever need help, the FedConnect Support Team is
standing by, ready to assist you.
My Profile.................................................. 40
Email
[email protected]
Phone
1-800-899-6665
Hours
Monday – Friday, 8 AM to 8 PM EDT
Closed on federal holidays.
Are you ready? Let’s GO!
www.fedconnect.net
© 2020 Unison. All rights reserved. FedConnect® is the registered trademark of Unison. in the U.S. and/or other countries.
FedConnect® is the registered trademark for the Unison product FedConnect. Information in this document is subject to change
without notice. Companies, names, government entities, and data used in examples herein are fictitious.
Before You Register
To register, you must submit the following information:
•
•
A SAM UEI
SAM MPIN
SAM UEI = A SAM Unique Entity Identifier is the 12 digit code that replaced the DUNS
number to identify your organization and is required to Register with FedConnect.
FedConnect uses this information to authenticate your organization against the System
for Award Management (SAM).
SAM MPIN = SAM Marketing Partner Identification Number (MPIN). It is required by the
government for most contracts, grants, and financial assistance. It is required for
FedConnect registration.
If your organization already has a SAM MPIN but you don’t know what it is, use the
search on the SAM website to look up SAM records. The person whose name is listed
there as the electronic business POC for your organization is likely the one who knows
the MPIN.
FedConnect does not store your MPIN—it uses it for
SAM authentication and for security.
Quick Recap:
1. Get a SAM UEI (go to www.sam.gov and register there).
2. Use the SAM UEI and SAM MPIN to register with
FedConnect.
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Registering in FedConnect
When you have your SAM UEI, you can register in FedConnect.
To register with FedConnect, go to www.fedconnect.net. The FedConnect splash page
displays, and then you can click the button labeled Register for Free Account.
Once you’ve clicked Register for Free Account on the FedConnect splash page, the
Registration Request page displays.
Everything marked with a red asterisk is required. Simply complete all required fields
and click Register. It’s that easy!
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About those Name and Email fields…
Name: The name you enter here is how it displays in FedConnect and how it is
submitted to the government. It must be your actual name, not a “handle” or “screen
name.” It cannot be seen by FedConnect users outside of your organization.
Email: Used as your user ID the next time you sign in to FedConnect. This is the email
address where FedConnect sends alerts.
Update your email system to accept mail from fedconnect.net so
important notices won’t be blocked or sent to your spam folder.
What Happens After You Click Register
As soon as you click Register, FedConnect checks the SAM UEI you used to see if
someone from your organization already registered it. This can go either one of two
ways:
• Somebody from your organization already registered that SAM UEI
•
Nobody else registered that UEI, you are the first person to use it in
FedConnect
If someone already registered with the same UEI, then FedConnect notifies your
administrator so he or she knows to give you access. Your administrator must sign in to
FedConnect and give you access.
If FedConnect does not find your UEI in the SAM database, then it routes you back to
the Registration Request page. But this time the SAM MPIN field displays so you can
enter that information. This route to registration is a little more involved.
FedConnect uses the MPIN to authenticate your account against SAM. If the UEI and
MPIN you entered match your organization’s record in SAM, then FedConnect creates
an account for your organization, and retrieves core data from your SAM record.
You will be set up as the first administrator for your organization. As an administrator,
you can set up and approve registration requests from other users in your organization
who self-register using the process documented above.
Either way, you end up in the same place: FedConnect will send
you an email message with a temporary password (it uses the
email address you entered when you registered).
Important! The temporary password expires within 72 hours, so be sure to sign
in right away.
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What to Do While You Wait
Feeling restless while you wait for your FedConnect email with that temporary
password? On the FedConnect splash page, in the Need help? section, you can:
•
Click Check Registration Status to check your registration progress.
•
Click Contact Your Organization’s FedConnect Administrator for a list of your
organization’s FedConnect administrators.
In each case, you are prompted for your email address. Once you enter your email
address and click Check Status or Contact Administrators, respectively, the system
either sends the requested information to your email address (in the case of Check
Status) or sends an email to your FedConnect administrator.
Registering Other Users
You can register as many people as you need. Accounts are free, and via the Company
Profile, you control who has access and access levels. You can register people as:
•
Administrators (to manage your account and users –we recommend more than
one in case one administrator accidentally locks his or her FedConnect account)
•
Representatives (to review and respond to government postings)
Give everyone who needs access has his or her own account so
you can monitor activity and save audit trails.
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Signing In
When the registration process is done, it’s time for the exciting part—signing in to
FedConnect!
Head on back to www.fedconnect.net. Only this time, click Sign In – Full Access.
The next thing you will see is the Sign In page.
The email address you used when you registered is what you put in the User ID field.
Important! IF this is your very first sign in to FedConnect, then this is where you
use that temporary password that expires 72 hours after it is emailed to you.
Once you sign in using the temporary password, FedConnect will prompt you to set the
real password for your account. After you change your password, voila! You will be
signed in to FedConnect.
If you attempt to sign in twice and are unsuccessful, STOP. See the guidance on
the next page.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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FedConnect’s Strict Sign-In Rules
To say that FedConnect has a very stringent sign-in security policy is putting it lightly.
We take security very seriously, so the system will inactivate your account after only
three unsuccessful attempts to sign in.
Your best bet after two unsuccessful sign in attempts is to click the
Forgot your password? Click here link.
In this scenario, FedConnect sends a new temporary password to the email address you
used when you registered.
When you try to sign in again using the temporary password, type slowly and carefully
because the password is case sensitive and might contain symbols such as commas and
periods.
What to Do if You Get Locked Out of FedConnect
Think you got locked out of your FedConnect account? First, perform a simple test to
confirm whether it really is indeed locked: click the Forgot your password? Click here
link.
However, if it has been inactivated, FedConnect sends you an email message that lists
your organization’s FedConnect administrator(s) and email address(es). Contact one of
them to have your account re-activated.
After either of the two scenarios above have played out, FedConnect will send you a
new temporary password.
Need Assistance?
Our Customer Care Team Wants to Help!
Available Monday – Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., EDT*
@
#
[email protected]
1-800-899-6665, Option 2
*Closed on federal holidays
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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Navigating the System
When you sign in to FedConnect, the first page that displays is the Message Center
page. You can think of this as the “Home page” for registered users. Here, we will
describe the features on the page that will help you navigate the system.
The Message Center page also goes by “the main Message Center.”
The condensed version of the Message Center that displays on the
opportunities pages is “the opportunities Message Center.”
The descriptions of the features below apply to both the main
Message Center and the opportunities Message Center.
The Message Center Page—“Home” For Registered Users
The following picture provides an example of how the Message Center page might look.
Some text on the page was intentionally blurred out or removed to alleviate privacy
concerns.
So, let’s break it down into its navigational elements (each one will be described in
detail after the list). Starting at the top of the page and working our way down, we have:
1. The System Toolbar: Displays in the top right corner of the page, is composed of
links labeled Home, Videos, Help, My Profile, Company Profile, and Sign Out.
2. The Menu Bar: Displays across the top of the page just under the FedConnect
logo. Each word in the list is called a tab, each tab is a link. Click the links to
access the pages. The tab is bold when you are on its corresponding page. Tabs
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are titled message center, all opportunities, directed opportunities, my
opportunities, and awards.
3. The Inbox Panel: Displays vertically on the left side of the page and contains
icons labeled Inbox, Drafts, Outbox, Sent, and Deleted.
4. The Message Search Menu: Displays above the list of messages. Includes links
labeled Search Criteria and Advanced Options.
5. The VCR Buttons: Display in the last three unlabeled columns in the list of
messages, just after the Public column. Includes icons with hover text labeled
Click to reply to message, Click to print message, Click to delete message.
About the System Toolbar
The system toolbar is available on most pages within FedConnect. The following picture
provides a close-up view of the system toolbar.
The system toolbar includes the following links:
•
Home—Click to return to the main Message Center page.
•
Help—Click to launch the FedConnect online help system.
•
My Profile—Click to access the User Info page where you can manage your
personal settings for FedConnect.
•
Company Profile—Click to access the Company Info page where you can
manage your organization’s users and company information. Available only to
users who are designated in FedConnect as administrators by your organization.
•
Sign Out—Click to sign out of the current active FedConnect session.
About the Menu Bar
To move about through the heart of FedConnect, use the links on the menu bar. The
following picture provides a close-up view of the menu bar.
The menu bar includes the following links:
•
Message Center—Click to view a list of links to the messages related to all
opportunities and awards where you are a team member.
•
All Opportunities—Click to view a list of links to all procurement, grant, and
other financial assistance opportunities. Includes both public and opportunities
specifically directed to your organization.
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•
Directed Opportunities—Click to view a list of links to the opportunities
directed to your organization (and possibly other vendors) by the agency. These
are opportunities that are otherwise not available to the general public.
•
My Opportunities—Click to view a list of links to the opportunities where you
registered as a team member or simply to receive notifications. Included on this
list are all non-auction type opportunities for contracts, grants, or other forms
of financial assistance.
•
Awards—Click to view a list of links to the awards sent to your organization via
FedConnect.
About the Inbox Panel
The inbox panel displays icons that are probably already familiar to most users, so we
will cover them only briefly here. The following list describes each button.
•
Click Inbox to return to the main inbox in the Message Center. It contains public
or directed messages sent to your organization.
•
Click Drafts to see a list of the drafts of messages that were started and then
saved by your organization but not yet completed and sent.
•
Click Outbox to see a list of the messages sent via the Message Center. It
contains messages your organization sent but that the agency has not yet
picked up.
•
Click Sent to see a list of messages sent by your organization and that the
agency has picked up.
•
Click Deleted to view a list of the messages that you deleted from the Message
Center view.
About the Message Search Menu
The message search menu contains two [Unlabeled] fields you can use to search for
messages in the Message Center. Searching is covered more thoroughly in Searching in
FedConnect.
About the VCR Buttons
Maybe not everyone remembers VCRs or even knows what a VCR is, but in the software
industry some navigational buttons are called VCR buttons. The following picture
illustrates the VCR buttons.
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The following is a list of the three VCR buttons and a description of each.
•
To respond to a message, select it from the list and click the Click to reply to
message button (looks like a left-pointing arrow).
•
To print a message, select it from the list and click the Click to print message
button.
•
To delete a message, select it from the list and click the Click to delete message
button.
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Searching in FedConnect
The search features in FedConnect are reliably consistent, so once you read about them
here, you will be able to use the search in each of the following locations:
•
Messages in the message center
•
Opportunities (all, direct, and “my”)
•
Awards
You can perform a “basic search” or an “advanced search.” To refine the list of results,
the basic search has one search filter and the advanced search has multiple. Either way,
for basic or advanced, after you enter search criteria, click Search to trigger FedConnect
to run the search. (Do not use the Enter key on your keyboard, you must click Search.)
USING A BASIC SEARCH
The following picture illustrates the basic search layout (it’s from the messages search).
A basic search has two [Unlabeled] fields. The first contains a drop-down list you can use
to narrow the search results based on specific criteria. Once you make a selection in that
field, you can type all or part of the word that will best help you find what you’re looking
for in the second [Unlabeled] field, which is a long empty text box.
USING AN ADVANCED SEARCH
When you click Advanced Options, the search menu extends and contains more fields.
The following picture illustrates the advanced search layout (from messages).
The advanced search fields match most of the selections in the drop-down list from the
basic search, but the difference is that in advanced search they are text boxes.
If you need more real estate on the page but you don’t want to redo your search, click
the Hide search criteria button to the left of the Search Criteria link.
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Opportunities—The Lay of the Land
Opportunities in FedConnect are really the heart and soul of the product. Therefore, we
will devote plenty of time to discussing how to use them. The following text describes
(in this order):
•
The types of opportunities
•
The “landscape” of opportunities pages and how to navigate them
Types of Opportunities
Federal agencies post a variety of different types of opportunities on FedConnect®
including those for procurement awards, grants and other financial assistance. In
FedConnect, opportunities are either public or directed.
MORE ABOUT PUBLIC OPPORTUNITIES
You do not need to be a registered user of FedConnect® to view public opportunities.
Public opportunities that government agencies post are available for anyone.
MORE ABOUT OPPORTUNITIES FOR SIGNED IN REGISTERED USERS
As a registered user who has signed in, you can see all opportunities, whether public or
directed. Directed opportunities can be for a specific vendor or applicant, or a limited
group of vendors or applicants.
If you are looking for opportunities for a procurement award (for example, a contract)
look for these opportunity posts:
•
Solicitation
•
Notices (pre-solicitation notices, sources sought, and special notices)
If you are looking for assistance awards (for example, a grant), look for these
opportunity posts:
•
Funding opportunities
The Opportunities Pages
The FedConnect pages you will use to see the lists of opportunities are named as
follows:
•
The All Opportunities page
•
The Directed Opportunities page
•
The My Opportunities page
Each of the pages in the above list might contain any combination of opportunities for
procurement awards, grants, and other financial assistance.
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The All Opportunities Page
The All Opportunities page lists everything available in FedConnect—both public
opportunities and opportunities available to registered FedConnect users.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click all opportunities on the menu bar
The following picture illustrates the All Opportunities page. Some details are blurred out
for privacy.
The columns that display might vary depending upon search criteria. Our picture
illustrates results for a basic search.
The Directed Opportunities Page
The Directed Opportunities page displays the opportunities that are specifically for your
organization, or for a group of companies selected by the agency that posted the
opportunity.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click directed opportunities on the menu bar
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The following picture illustrates how the Directed Opportunities page might look. Some
details are blurred out for privacy.
The My Opportunities Page
The My Opportunities page is just like it sounds—all about the opportunities you are
personally involved with. It displays the opportunities you have registered to receive
notifications for, or the opportunities where you are a member of the opportunity team.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click my opportunities on the menu bar
The following picture illustrates how the My Opportunities page might look. Some
details are blurred out for privacy.
The Opportunity Page
The Opportunity page comprises three panels. Reading from left to right, they are as
follows:
•
The left-side panel is pretty static and tells the story about the agency and
overview information about the opportunity.
•
The center panel is flexible and its story changes according to the status of the
opportunity
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•
The right-side panel somewhat flexible and has some status changes. It adds
more detail to the opportunity’s story by way of documentation and vendor or
applicant information such as response team members and responses.
Illustrations of the Opportunity Page During Different Opportunity
Scenarios
In this section, we will cover how the Opportunity page might look in three different
scenarios:
1. When you have not yet registered for the opportunity
2. When you access the opportunity and your company has already registered for
it
3. When you join the response team for an opportunity
THE OPPORTUNITY PAGE WHEN NOBODY HAS REGISTERED
If you are the first person to review the opportunity for your organization, or no one
from your organization has registered yet, the Opportunity page will look similar to the
following picture. Descriptions of the elements on the page and information about how
it looks in various scenarios are described in more detail following this picture.
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The following table lists what happens in the left, center, and right panels when you
open an opportunity that your company has not registered for.
Table 1. Opportunity Page Panels: New Opportunity
Left Panel
Center Panel
Right Panel
In this initial scenario, the
left panel contains:
In this first scenario, the
center panel contains two
buttons:
In scenario one, the right
panel contains
•
•
The Description
block, with highlevel information
about the
opportunity
The Overview block,
with basic agency
contact information
•
Register to Receive
Notifications
•
Return to
Opportunity List
•
The Documents
block
•
The documents
that the agency
posted with the
opportunity
THE OPPORTUNITY PAGE IN A REGISTERED OPPORTUNITY, YOU HAVE NOT JOINED THE TEAM
This second scenario illustrates how it might look if someone from your organization has
already registered for an opportunity. In this case, the Opportunity page will look similar
to the next picture, with new wording, and an addition to the right panel.
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The following table lists what happens in the left, center, and right panels when you
open an opportunity that your organization has already registered for, but you have not
yet joined the response team.
Table 2. Opportunity Page Panels: Registered Opportunity
Left Panel
Center Panel
Right Panel
Even in this second
scenario, the left panel
still contains:
• The Description
block
• The Overview block
In this second scenario,
the center panel contains:
• A different message
In scenario two, the right
panel contains everything
from the first time, but
also:
• The Response Team
block
• The Join button
THE OPPORTUNITY PAGE IN A REGISTERED OPPORTUNITY WHEN YOU ARE A TEAM MEMBER
In this third scenario, your organization has registered for the opportunity, and you have
become a member of the response team. The most obvious addition to the center panel
is an abbreviated version of the Message Center. And what’s great about it is that the
center panel really becomes a little online business communication hub for you, your
organization, and the agency that posted the opportunity.
The following picture illustrates how the Opportunity page might look in this third
scenario.
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The following table lists what happens in the left, center, and right panels when you
open a registered opportunity, and you are a member of the response team.
Table 3. Opportunity Page Panels: Response Team Member
Left Panel
Center Panel
Right Panel
Still no change in the third
scenario, the left panel
still contains:
• The Description
block
• The Overview block
In this third scenario, the
center panel contains:
• A mini version of the
Message Center
In scenario three, the
right panel contains
everything from the first
two, but also:
• The Responses block
• The Create button
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Opportunities in Action
There are several actions you can take on opportunities. In brief, these actions include
such things as:
•
Reviewing and registering interest in an opportunity (this differs from
registering as a user)
•
Joining or removing yourself from a response team
•
Creating and submitting a response
•
Creating a “no bid” response
Reviewing and Registering for an Opportunity
When you find an opportunity in the list that you want to review, click its link in the Title
column.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click all opportunities -OR- directed opportunities on the menu
bar | click an opportunity title in the Title column
The following picture illustrates a Software Management solicitation amendment link in
the Title column.
After you click an opportunity title link in the Title column, the Opportunity page
displays. This is where you can register interest in opportunities. If you register interest
in an opportunity that means you will be kept up to date on it and can respond to it.
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Any user who registers interest or who joins a response team
receives updates on opportunities and can respond to them. The
difference is that when you register, you are doing so on behalf of
your organization. This happens only once. When you join a
response team, you do so in your own interest.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click all opportunities -OR- directed opportunities on the menu
bar | click an opportunity title in the Title column | click Register to Receive
Notifications
After you click Register to Receive Notifications, the Message Center, the Responses
block, and the Response Team block all display on the Opportunity page.
Joining or Removing Yourself from a Response Team
If someone from your organization has already registered, and if you want to receive
updates or to respond too, then all you need to do is join the response team. And
joining a response team is really simple! Once you’re on the Opportunity page, all you
have to do is click Join in the Response Team block.
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Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click all opportunities -OR- directed opportunities on the menu
bar | click an opportunity title in the Title column | click Join
Once you click Join, your name displays in the Team Member list in the Response Team
block.
WANT TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THE RESPONSE TEAM?
To remove yourself (or anyone else, for that matter) from a response team, just look for
the little capital letter X that displays in the far-right column of the Team Member table
in the Response Team block on the Opportunity page. At the prompt, click OK to
continue.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click my opportunities -OR- directed opportunities on the menu
bar | click an opportunity title in the Title column | click X
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At the prompt, click OK to continue.
Don’t panic if you accidentally delete the wrong user. (Hey. It can
happen!) Nothing prevents the user from going back into the
opportunity and clicking Join to rejoin the response team.
ACKNOWLEDGING AMENDMENTS (OR MODIFICATIONS )
If the agency issues an amendment to an opportunity, it displays in the Documentation
block on the Opportunity page (this also applies to modifications that might display in
the Documentation block on the Award page). To acknowledge that you received the
amendment, select the checkbox next to it and click Acknowledge.
The following picture illustrates how to acknowledge updated documentation from the
agency.
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Creating and Submitting a Response
Whether you submit a proposal for financial assistance or a grant, or you submit a quote
or proposal, FedConnect provides a way to prepare and securely transmit that
information directly to the government. FedConnect includes six pages that you can use
to create and submit a response for an opportunity. These are the page titles:
•
Cover Page
•
Pricing
•
Attachments
•
Cost Sensitive Attachments
•
Summary
•
Complete
Important! The recommended file size limit of files you can send in FedConnect
is 25 MB per individual file, or 100 MB per response or message.
Example
For example, a user cannot submit a response that contains an attachment 40 MB in
size, however they can submit a response that contains two attachments each at 20 MB
in size. In addition, the user would not be able to submit a response that contains 6
attachments each at 20MB in size, as that would exceed the 100 MB submission limit.
Recording Cover Page Information
Use the Cover Page page to enter your organization’s key contact information. To speed
the process along, FedConnect prefills these fields with data from your company profile.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | click
Create or click a response link in the Description column in the Responses block to open
an existing response
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The following picture illustrates the Create button and a response link in the Description
column in the Responses block on the right panel on the Opportunity page.
A NOTE ABOUT PREVIOUSLY SUBMITTED RESPONSES
Responses already submitted and responses that you exited before submitting display in
the Responses block.
Depending upon the type of opportunity, you might be able to submit more than one
response. For example, an opportunity might allow for a primary and an alternate
response. All of those responses are created and managed in the Responses block on
the Opportunity page.
The following list explains the features in the table in the Responses block:
•
Description—FedConnect automatically defaults the description to “As
Solicited.” Can be edited on the Cover Page when you create or edit a response.
•
Status—The response’s current status (Submitted, Received, etc.)
•
Date—The status date. For instance, if the status is Received, the date column
displays the date the government agency received the response.
•
History—Click to see the response’s audit history (who accessed it, edited it,
submitted it, etc.)
•
Copy—To make a copy of the response and use it to create a new response for
this opportunity, click Copy.
•
Withdraw—Click to tell the agency that you want to withdraw the response.
Depending upon the rules of the competition, the agency will let you know
whether your withdrawal request is granted.
Adding Pricing Information
Use the Pricing page to enter pricing for line items. This is most frequently used for
simple requests for quotes. The Pricing page does not always display as it is dependent
upon the agency posting of the opportunity.
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Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | create or
open a response | click Pricing
The following picture illustrates the Pricing page.
Adding Attachments
If you want to include any attachments other than cost-sensitive attachments with the
response, add them on the Attachments page.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | create or
open a response | click Attachments
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The following picture illustrates the Attachments page.
Adding Cost Sensitive Attachments
Use the Cost Sensitive Attachments page to fulfill government agency requests for
pricing or other cost-type data when they want you to include it separately from your
primary proposal.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | create or
open a response | click Cost Sensitive Attachments
The following picture illustrates the Cost Sensitive Attachments page.
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Reviewing the Summary
Use the Summary page to get an overall look at what you are about to transmit to the
government. You can quickly review or print the summary from this page.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | create or
open a response | click Summary
The following picture illustrates the Summary page.
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Completing and Submitting the Response
The Complete page is where you actually submit the response to the government
agency. This sends the response along with any attachments you added.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | create or
open a response | click Complete
The following picture illustrates the Complete page.
Before you submit the response, be sure to make an entry in the Offer valid for (days)
field. By default, 60 automatically displays in this field, but you can edit it.
You must also make sure you’ve included an attachment that contains the signature of
someone who can contractually bind your organization.
When you are sure everything is ready, click Submit Response to Agency.
Response Confirmation
When you click Submit Response to Agency, FedConnect records the date and time of
the submission and displays the Confirmation page with the date and timestamp.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | create or
open a response | click Complete | click Submit Response to Agency
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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The following picture illustrates the Confirmation page.
In the previous picture, the submission’s status is “Queued. Awaiting agency pick-up.”
This status means that FedConnect is waiting for the government agency’s system to
pick it up. This can be minutes or hours—it depends on the agency’s system
configuration.
Regardless of when the agency picks up your response, the date and timestamp that
they see as the submitted date and time is the actual date and time when you clicked
Submit Response to Agency. It displays on the Confirmation page in the Sent field.
Click the Print icon if you want to print a copy of the confirmation for your records.
Submitting “No Bid” Responses
In the event that you should want to submit a “no response,” like a “no bid” type of
response, FedConnect has you covered for that scenario, too.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click an opportunities tab | click an opportunity title | create or
open a response | click No Bid Response
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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The following picture illustrates the location of the Submit No Response button on the
Opportunity page.
When you click Submit No Response, the Complete page displays, just like it does when
you submit a full response, but this time the message differs slightly, as illustrated in the
following picture.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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To finalize the process, click Submit Response to Agency. A final version of the
Complete page displays with date and timestamp, and you can print a copy of the page
for your records—all of this is illustrated in the following picture.
Important! The only time you can submit a “no bid” response is when your
company or organization has not yet submitted a response.
In fact, the Submit No Response button does not even display on the Opportunity page
if someone has already responded to an opportunity. Furthermore, even if someone
submitted a response and then it was withdrawn, you still cannot then go back in and
submit a no bid response.
On the flip side of that, however, you can submit a no bid response, and then withdraw
it. In this case, FedConnect sends a withdraw requested email to the agency. Once you
have withdrawn the no bid response, you can then submit a regular response. Keep in
mind that all of these transactions are recorded in FedConnect and that all parties
involved will have a full audit trail.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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Receiving an Award
Government agencies can deliver awards to your organization via FedConnect®. Awards
can include government contracts, grants, or other forms of financial assistance. The
Awards page displays a list of all of the awards to your organization that were delivered
by an agency via FedConnect. Even though an award displays in the list, that doesn’t
necessarily mean you are on the award team. Awards in FedConnect have a team
concept similar to response teams; you must intentionally join the team.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click awards on the menu bar
The following picture illustrates how the Awards page might look. Some details are
blurred out for privacy.
From the Awards page, click a link in the Title column and the Award page displays with
all the specific details of the award.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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Illustrations of the Award Page in Different Scenarios
In this section, we will cover how the Award page might look in two different scenarios:
1. When you have not yet joined the award team
2. When you are a member of the award team
THE AWARD PAGE WHEN YOU HAVE NOT JOINED THE TEAM
This first scenario illustrates how it might look when you open an award, but you have
not yet joined the team. In this case, the Award page will look similar to the next
picture, with new wording, and an addition to the right panel.
The following table lists what happens in the left, center, and right panels when you
open an award, but you have not yet joined the award team.
Table 4. Award Page Panels: Not An Award Team Member
Left Panel
Center Panel
Right Panel
In this first scenario, the
left panel contains:
• The Description
block
• The Overview block
In this first scenario, the
center panel contains:
• A “What Do I Do
Now?” message
In scenario one, the right
panel contains:
• The Documentation
block
• The Award Team
block
• The Join button
THE AWARD PAGE WHEN YOU ARE A TEAM MEMBER
In this second scenario you have become a member of the award team. Like the
Opportunity page, the condensed Message Center displays in the center panel so that
you, your organization, and the agency can communicate about the award.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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The following picture illustrates how the Award page might look in this second scenario.
The following table lists what happens in the left, center, and right panels when you
open an award, and you are a member of the award team.
Table 5. Award Page Panels: Award Team Member
Left Panel
Center Panel
Right Panel
No change—the left panel
still contains:
• The Description
block
• The Overview block
In this second scenario,
the center panel contains:
• A mini version of the
Message Center
In scenario two, the right
panel contains:
• The Documentation
block
• The Award Team
block
Because you are already a
member, it does NOT
display:
• The Join button
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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Sending/Receiving Messages
When you review an opportunity, work on a response, or manage an award, you might
have questions or need to discuss something with the agency. In the FedConnect
Message Center, you can do just that! We’ve mentioned in a couple of places in this
document that there are two versions of the Message Center: the full version you see
when you sign in to FedConnect, and the condensed or abbreviated version you see on
the Opportunity page and the Award page (it offers a more focused view of the Message
Center). Either way, most of the concepts for using the Message Center are the same,
and in the following text any substantial differences will be called out.
The FedConnect Message Center works much like a standard email program where you
can create a new message, reply to messages, add attachments, etc.
FedConnect’s Message Center has three benefits over a traditional
email system: all transactions are secure, recorded in the system,
and automatically associated with their related opportunity or
award. Those are benefits that all parties involved can count on!
The main Message Center displays a compilation of all messages, both those directed to
your company or organization and those sent publicly. When you open an opportunity
or award to view the details, the condensed version of the Message Center displays only
the communication sent or received for that specific document.
Another standout feature in the main Message Center is that you have delete option
(the X on the far-right side of the list of messages—there is one for each message),
which makes the list more manageable and makes it easier to find things. Messages you
delete from the main Message Center are not actually deleted from the document
record—they just don’t display in the main Message Center anymore. You can still see
them when you view the summary of their related opportunity or award.
To restore a deleted message, go to the Deleted folder, select the message and click the
button that looks a little bit like a recycling symbol (two arrows turning as if in a
continuous circle). When you hover your mouse over it, the label is “Click to undelete
message.” When you click that button, the message is returned to the folder you
originally deleted it from. The only exceptions are draft messages that have not yet
been sent—they are permanently removed from FedConnect.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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The full Message Center looks something like this:
The focused version of the Message Center looks something like this:
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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Managing Your Account
Managing your FedConnect account comprises managing:
•
Your company profile (limited to your organization’s FedConnect administrator)
•
Your user profile (all FedConnect users)
Each one is described in more detail in the following pages.
Company Profile
If you are the FedConnect administrator for your organization, you have access to each
of the following parts of the company profile:
•
Read-only key company information (UEI, CAGE, notification method, etc.)
•
Searchable list of users, both active and inactive
•
Read-only company address and key contact information
•
Read-only list of PSC/FSC codes that interest your company
•
Read-only list of NAICS codes that interest your company
The address and codes are automatically downloaded from SAM when your company
account is created in FedConnect—once created, all of that information must be edited
via the SAM website. Changes in SAM can be updated in FedConnect if your FedConnect
administrator clicks the Update Company from SAM button on the Company Info page.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click Company Profile on the system toolbar
The following picture illustrates the Company Info page.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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To navigate to the other areas of the company profile, click the tabs on the menu bar, or
click Continue at the bottom of the page.
My Profile
In FedConnect®, My Profile is your personal profile. It is where you maintain information
such as your name, how it displays or prints, and the types of notifications you would
like to receive from FedConnect. It is also where you go to change your password.
The email address listed in your personal profile is your FedConnect user ID, and its
where FedConnect sends send email alerts for opportunities, awards, etc.
Navigation
Sign in to FedConnect | click My Profile on the system toolbar
The following picture illustrates the User Info page.
Click the Notifications tab to configure the types of notifications you want FedConnect
to send to you via email. You can control this by filtering to only the NAICS and agencies
where you have interest. This is a personal setting and does not affect others in your
organization.
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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In Closing
We at Unison sincerely hope that by using FedConnect, your organization is met with
success, and that by bridging the gap between you and the federal opportunities that
exist, we have somehow helped your organization flourish.
Unison's FedConnect application is a web portal that bridges the gap between
government agencies and their vendor and grants applicant communities to streamline
the process of doing business with government. Through this portal you can review
opportunities and receive awards. You and your team will also have an open channel of
communication with the government that is both secure and auditable.
However, this differs from Unison Marketplace, which is an all-encompassing online
acquisition platform that assists in the purchasing the goods and services needed to
fulfill procurement requirements for the Federal government. Unison Marketplace
enables small and large companies to easily bid, win, and manage contracts.
If you are looking for assistance with Unison Marketplace or your Unison Marketplace
account, please navigate to the following URL and our Marketplace Support team can
help with your request:
https://marketplace.unisonglobal.com/
FedConnect Ready, Set, Go!
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File Type | application/pdf |
Author | Michelle Le Teigner |
File Modified | 2023-07-18 |
File Created | 2020-06-09 |