Map your scope
We find what actually touches DoD technical data in your shop — usually far less than you fear. Your shop-floor machines and front-office PCs typically drop out of scope entirely.
Move your DoD work into a secure virtual environment and inherit 65+ of the 110 required controls on Day 1. Your team handles about 10 practical items — we do the rest, together — and you're assessment-ready in under 6 months. Small-shop budget. Big-shop security. Your contracts, kept.
The trick isn't securing every computer you own — it's making sure the sensitive DoD data (CUI) only ever lives in one controlled place. That one decision changes everything about your cost, your timeline, and your sanity.
We find what actually touches DoD technical data in your shop — usually far less than you fear. Your shop-floor machines and front-office PCs typically drop out of scope entirely.
Your DoD work — drawings, specs, contracts, email — moves into the secure virtual workspace. The moment it does, 65+ of the 110 controls are inherited from the environment itself.
We knock out your ~10 remaining items together (access rules, policies we draft, training we run), then score you in a practice assessment before you ever face the real one — with us at the table.
Third-party certification becomes a hard condition of award for CUI work on November 10, 2026 (32 CFR §170.3). Around 200,000 companies will converge on a small pool of assessors — and your prime is already sorting suppliers into "certified," "credible plan," and "start finding replacements." Count backwards: assessor queue + 6-month runway = start this quarter, not next year.
Yes — you're exactly who this was built for. The secure environment carries the technical load (encryption, monitoring, access control, backups — 65+ of the 110 controls). Your part is a short practical list: deciding who gets access, adopting policies we draft for you, and having your team take training we run. You build parts; the enclave handles the firewalls.
A small fraction of the do-it-yourself route. The DoD's own estimate for just the Level 2 assessment is $105K–$118K — before any fixing. Because the enclave shrinks your audit scope dramatically, both the readiness work and the assessment get smaller and cheaper. On your readiness call we give you a real number for your size — no games, and if we're not the right fit we'll say so.
No. That's the point of the enclave model: your DoD data moves into the secure virtual workspace, and your existing office network mostly drops out of audit scope. Your team logs into the secure environment for DoD work and uses everything else exactly as before.
Under 6 months from kickoff to assessment-ready is our standard flight plan (scope mapping → migration → your short list → practice assessment). The pace-setter is usually how quickly your team makes a few decisions — we handle the heavy lifting.
You're not alone, and the answer is to fix it credibly, not to panic. Misstated scores are now a False Claims Act issue (DOJ has settled cases for millions), so the move is simple: establish your real posture, put a credible plan behind it, and update honestly. That's literally what the readiness call maps out — confidentially.
Primes want three things: a score they can trust, evidence behind it, and a certification date they can put in their program plan. Our clients hand their primes all three inside the first month — and because certified subs are getting scarce, several got more work as a result.
Pick a time below. You'll leave with your readiness picture, your one-page scope sketch, and your number — whatever you decide to do with it.