Why So Many Small Businesses Fail to Pass the DCAA Audit

 

Small businesses face multiple challenges when they’re trying to secure government contracts. Their main area of difficulty? The stringent ethics and compliance programs they have to implement in their companies. Small-scale businesses and contractors don’t have large management teams. When they experience rapid growth, performing basic organizational functions takes up all of their time, energy, and labor. These are the technical reasons why small businesses often fail to pass compliance audits. However, there are other forces at play behind these inabilities. Some of them have to do with how small-scale businesses and contractors view the compliance programs they wish to implement. Here are some types of views that often hold small businesses back.



Viewing Compliance as a Risk Mitigation Process

Many small-scale businesses and contractors view compliance as a risk mitigation tactic. What’s the consequence of failing a DCAA audit? No contracts! What’s the upside of passing this audit? Apart from securing contracts, most small-scale businesses and contractors will say achieving compliance has no other upsides. Changing this attitude is critical. Instead, businesses and contractors must view ethics and compliance programs as tools to avoid mistakes like performing costly re-work. A compliant contractor is way more effective than a non-compliant one. That’s because just the practice of achieving compliance at every level, everyday makes these organizations function better.



Viewing Compliance as a Separate Function

Many contractors view DCAA Compliance as just another task. They separate compliance from their other business functions. Instead, they should see compliance as a force to make correct decisions with all business functions. Every worker should have a role in compliance – from accounting to business development. Achieving compliance is not completing an extra task. It’s about aligning all the tasks you perform as a contractor with government regulations.