In one of the most closely watched federal procurements in recent years, Nichols Law successfully represented Technatomy Corporation— a service-disabled veteran-owned small business (SDVOSB)—in its challenge to the Department of Veterans Affairs’ $60.7 billion, 10-year Transformation Twenty-One Total Technology Next Generation 2 (T4NG2) contract.
Out of 31 protestors, only three ultimately prevailed following the VA’s revaluation of proposals. Nichols Law led one of those rare, successful protests, securing Technatomy a coveted spot on this high-value multiple-award IDIQ contract, and converting Technatomy from named plaintiff to intervenor.
Technatomy’s protest challenged the VA’s flawed evaluation, which had improperly deducted evaluation points from Technatomy’s proposal—ultimately excluding it from award. Nichols Law’s advocacy resulted in the correction of the agency’s scoring error. Upon reevaluation, Technatomy’s revised score vaulted it into award position.
While litigation remains ongoing, thanks to this victory, Technatomy is now in the drivers seat holding a prime contract under T4NG2, giving the company access to compete for billions in task orders over the next decade. Nichols Law’s work not only reversed an erroneous agency decision but also preserved a transformative growth opportunity for a veteran-owned small business in one of the government’s most significant technology acquisition vehicles.