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Huntsville’s MartinFederal awarded portion of estimated $7.5 billion contract

Huntsville-based MartinFederal Consulting on Wednesday announced that it has been awarded a subcontract to provide a broad scope of next-generation technological advancements in how information technology supports American warfighters.

The subcontract — which comes through Department of Defense prime contractor Integrated Systems, Inc. — is part of a Systems Engineering, Technology & Innovation (SETI) multiple award, indefinite delivery and indefinite quantity contract. The total SETI contract reportedly has a five-year base with one five-year option, with a total ceiling value of $7.5 billion.

A release from MartinFederal advised the company will “provide critical engineering expertise to research, design, develop, implement, integrate, and optimize Department of Defense (DoD) information technology capabilities, systems and solutions.”

“We’re honored to provide support to our prime contractor, Integrated Systems, Inc., to advance DoD’s future mission requirements,” stated Corey Martin, founder and CEO of MartinFederal.

“We look forward to doing our part to apply innovation to accelerate attainment of new information systems capabilities,” concluded Martin.

The company has been headquartered in the Rocket City since its founding in 2007. MartinFederal is classified as a Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) and is focused on providing services to the Department of Justice, Department of Defense, Department of Energy and other federal agencies. The company has grown to directly employ over 130 people in 19 locations across nine states and three countries. In fact, MartinFederal was recently named to the annual Inc. 5000 list of the fastest growing companies in America. This was the fourth consecutive year the company received that distinction.

Editor’s Note: This draft has been updated to reflect MartinFederal receiving a portion of the estimated $7.5 billion total contract. A release from the company had erroneously said the subcontract alone was worth that amount.

Sean Ross is the editor of Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on Twitter @sean_yhn

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