Grain Farming Contracts in North Carolina
Federal all other grain farming contract opportunities in North Carolina (NAICS 111199). Data refreshes daily from SAM.gov.
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How to Win Grain Farming Contracts in North Carolina
The opportunity: The federal government awards billions in all other grain farming work annually, and North Carolina is a major market thanks to federal facilities, military installations, and agency offices in the state. Contracts under NAICS 111199 typically range from simplified acquisitions ($10K–$250K, often sole-source or set-aside) to full solicitations worth $1M+.
Set-aside advantage: If you're a certified small business (8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, or SDVOSB), many grain farming contracts in North Carolina are reserved for you — meaning you compete against fewer bidders. The federal goal is 23%+ of all contract dollars to small businesses.
To bid: You need (1) an active SAM.gov registration with your UEI, (2) the ability to perform all other grain farming work, (3) any state-specific licenses North Carolina requires for your trade, and (4) enough past performance to be credible. For smaller contracts under $250K, past performance requirements are often relaxed — that's where new govcon businesses break in.
Why timing matters: Most solicitations have a 14–30 day response window. By the time you find one manually on SAM.gov, you've lost half your preparation time. That's what GovBidScope solves — we alert you within hours of posting, with a plain-English summary so you can decide in 10 seconds whether to pursue it.
FAQ: Grain Farming Contracts in North Carolina
How many grain farming contracts does the government post in North Carolina?
It varies by fiscal quarter, but NAICS 111199 typically sees 30–200+ opportunities per month with performance in North Carolina. Volume spikes in Q4 (July–September) as agencies spend remaining budgets before the fiscal year ends October 1.
What certifications help win grain farming contracts in North Carolina?
The most valuable: 8(a) (if you qualify — it opens sole-source awards up to $4.5M), SDVOSB (3% federal goal), HUBZone (based on your office location), and WOSB (5% goal). Beyond certifications, past performance on similar work is what evaluators weight most heavily.
I'm new to govcon. Can I win a grain farming contract with no past performance?
Yes — target simplified acquisitions (under $250K) and micro-purchases (under $10K). These have reduced requirements and agencies are often directed to buy from small businesses. Also look for subcontracting opportunities with prime contractors already working grain farming contracts in North Carolina.
How fast do I need to respond to a grain farming solicitation?
Most solicitations give 14–30 calendar days. Combined synopsis/solicitations (the most common for small purchases) often give 15 days. That's why alerts matter — finding an opportunity on day 12 gives you 3 days to write a proposal, which isn't enough for complex bids.
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