DISA pursues new engineering and IT partners to enable the Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability

Originally published DISA pursues new engineering and IT partners to enable the Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability on by https://defensescoop.com/2025/07/17/disa-pursues-new-engineering-and-it-partners-to-enable-the-joint-warfighting-cloud-capability/ at DefenseScoop


DISA pursues new engineering and IT partners to enable the Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability | DefenseScoop

Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

A new cloud-enabling information request was posted by DISA’s Hosting and Compute Directorate, which manages the $9B JWCC contract vehicle.


Listen to this article

0:00

Learn more.

This feature uses an automated voice, which may result in occasional errors in pronunciation, tone, or sentiment.

Warfighters operate IT equipment at the lab located at Defense Information Systems Agency Headquarters at Fort Meade Md. (DISA Photo by: David Abizaid)

The Defense Information Systems Agency is exploring new partnerships with small businesses that can supply “a wide range of information technology” services to support its Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability (JWCC) program office as it continues to mature, according to a federal contracting notice published Thursday.

“JWCC requires highly skilled services to support office operations, and the delivery of modern enterprise cloud services and related technologies. These services must include technical expertise in cloud engineering, cybersecurity, financial management, program execution support, and technical writing through direct support of system owners and technical experts regarding various challenges with migration to the cloud and leveraging commercial cloud technologies,” officials wrote. 

The Department of Defense awarded its highly-anticipated enterprise cloud contract to Google, Oracle, Amazon Web Services and Microsoft in late 2022. 

JWCC marks a key element in the DOD’s push for digital modernization, and the original contract has a ceiling of $9 billion. Officials have been somewhat tight-lipped about JWCC progress since the program’s inception — but as of August 2024, the Pentagon had awarded just under $1 billion in task orders to vendors competing for the enterprise cloud initiative.

Advertisement

This latest defense cloud-enabling information request was published by DISA’s Hosting and Compute Directorate, which is responsible for managing the JWCC contract vehicle.

“This is a SOURCES SOUGHT NOTICE to determine the availability and technical capability of 8(a) certified small businesses to provide the required products and/or services,” officials wrote.

Such companies have gone through and been verified by a federal government-run federal contracting and training program designed for experienced small business owners who are considered socially and economically disadvantaged. 

In Thursday’s notice, DISA officials list and define associated in-demand capabilities across three categories: Cloud Infrastructure and Engineering; Cybersecurity and Risk Management; and Infrastructure and Software Engineering.

The work is envisioned to be performed at DISA facilities inside and outside of the continental U.S. The anticipated period of performance is a 1-month transition period, an 11-month base period, and four 12-month option periods.

Advertisement

Businesses that aim to respond must submit information including a brief capabilities statement to an email included in the notice, by July 31.

Earlier this year, DISA unveiled plans to roll out a follow-on to the current enterprise cloud vehicle — named JWCC Next — likely in 2026. A DISA spokesperson declined to answer questions Thursday regarding the motivation behind this new sources sought notice, or how it fits into the agency’s vision for JWCC Next.

“As standard practice, DISA cannot discuss open solicitations posted on SAM.gov or other sites, as it could violate established procurement regulations and policies. Therefore, we have nothing to add at this time,” the spokesperson told DefenseScoop.

Brandi Vincent

Written by Brandi Vincent

Brandi Vincent is DefenseScoop’s Pentagon correspondent. She reports on emerging and disruptive technologies, and associated policies, impacting the Defense Department and its personnel. Prior to joining Scoop News Group, Brandi produced a long-form documentary and worked as a journalist at Nextgov, Snapchat and NBC Network. She grew up in Louisiana and received a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Maryland.

Latest Podcasts

Advertisement

Originally published DefenseScoop

Related Posts

GoFundMe Launches ‘Giving Funds’

Originally published GoFundMe Launches ‘Giving Funds’ on July 18, 2025 03:44 by https://www.sdbj.com/technology/gofundme-launches-giving-funds/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=gofundme-launches-giving-funds

About Us
woman wearing glasses

To assist commercially facing small and startup technology companies, and help determine if there is value in engaging with defense, intelligence community.

Let’s Socialize

Popular Post