Small Business Goals

The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) conducts an annual assessment of each Federal agency’s efforts to award contracts to U.S. small businesses.  The assessment is referred to as the Small Business Procurement Scorecard

The SBA defines a small business as one that is independently owned and operated, organized for profit, and that is not dominant in its field.  Depending on the industry, size standard eligibility is based on the average number of employees for the preceding twelve months or on sales volume averaged over a three-year period. Please visit SBA’s website www.sba.gov for additional information regarding size standards.

USAID negotiates an annual worldwide small business goal with the SBA.  The Agency takes the process a step further by establishing internal small business goals for its Bureaus and Independent Offices in Washington, D.C., and its geographical or regional Bureaus (includes overseas Missions).  USAID’s latest scorecard assessment may be viewed on the SBA's Goaling Program web page.  The following is USAID’s Fiscal Year 2017 small business goals:

United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Small Business Goals:

PRIME CONTRACTING GOALS FOR FY 2017

 

Small Business

11.5%

Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business

3%

Historically Underutilized Business Zone Small Business

3%

Woman Owned Small Business

5%

Small Disadvantaged Business

5%

 

SUBCONTRACTING GOALS FOR FY 2017

 

Small Business

18%

Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business

3%

Historically Underutilized Business Zone Small Business

3%

Woman Owned Small Business

5%

Small Disadvantaged Business

5%

You may contact Teneshia Alston, Goaling Manager (talston@usaid.gov) if you have questions concerning the Agency’s goaling process.