Federal Contracting Professional Certification (For Federal Contractors)
This certification program is for federal contractors who want to understand government contracting the way the government does — from the inside out. Most contractor training teaches you how to register on SAM, find opportunities, and write a proposal. This program gives you the same high-quality training that government personnel receive, with curriculum based on the actual CON 1100 - 1400 courses given to federal contracting personnel — and taught by the same instructor (Phoenix Canyon is an official DAU/WarU-equivalent training provider, and your instructor has personally taught federal contracting to more than 1,000 federal acquisition personnel spanning more than 20 federal agencies).
This program was designed to fill that genuine gap in the market, giving contractors an opportunity to train at the same level as government contracting personnel. Rather than a surface-level understanding, here you will learn to think like a contracting officer: you'll know what the government should be doing at every stage and why — so you'll be able to spot when they get it wrong. And when you spot an error, you'll know what to do, because you also learn your rights as a federal contractor and the remedies available to you. This insider's knowledge also helps you strategically: a true understanding of what the government is looking for during each phase of the acquisition process, how to position yourself for success, and where the risks lie for contractors within the system. This curriculum has everything you need to turn your team into subject-matter experts.
The full certification is ten days of training across five modules, which you complete at a pace that works for your business.
The certification is built from five modules:
Module 1 — Foundations: How Federal Contracting Works and How the Government Thinks (2 days · covers CON 1100 competencies)
The landscape and the mindset. How the federal acquisition system is structured, who the players are, and — most importantly — how to think like the contracting officer across the table. You'll learn how to research the rules yourself: the FAR and Revolutionary FAR Overhaul (RFO), class deviations, Practitioner Albums, the FAR Companion, and the free government resources most contractors don't know exist. This is the foundation everything else builds on.
Module 2 — Pre-Award and Positioning (3 days · covers CON 1200 competencies)
Where contracts are won or lost — and the highest-value module for most contractors. How the government plans an acquisition, shapes requirements, conducts market research, and builds a solicitation. You'll learn to read a solicitation the way the person who wrote it intended, to understand the acquisition strategy behind it, and to position your company before the RFP ever drops.
Module 3 — Award and Source Selection (2 days · covers CON 1300 competencies)
How award decisions are actually made. How the government evaluates offers, conducts source selection, and documents the decision — so you understand exactly how you're being judged and how to make your proposal stronger. You'll also learn what genuinely makes an award protest-worthy, from someone who evaluated proposals from the inside.
Module 4 — Post-Award and Administration (2 days · covers CON 1400 competencies)
What happens after you win. Contract administration, performance management, modifications, payments, and closeout — the daily reality of performing a federal contract, and where contractors most often run into trouble they could have avoided.
Module 5 — Federal Contractor Rights & Remedies (1 day)
The capstone the government curriculum doesn't include. Your rights and remedies as a contractor: data rights, protests, disputes, terminations, requests for equitable adjustment, claims, and the changes that drive most of them — plus how to manage your risk across the whole relationship. You'll learn one of the most valuable lessons a contractor can know: who is authorized to make changes to contract performance (so your invoices don’t get left unpaid) and what to do if an unauthorized person attempts to change your contract requirements. This is the module built entirely around protecting you.
To earn the Federal Contracting Professional Certification, you complete all five modules and pass the proficiency exam for each one. The exams aren't a formality — they're how the certification stays meaningful. This isn't a badge you buy by sitting through a webinar; it's a credential you earn by demonstrating you actually understand federal contracting, module by module, the same way the government's own workforce proves itself along the way.
These Federal Contracting Professional Certification courses are taught by Melinda Milheim, JD, who spent her federal career in the acquisition workforce. She served as a Contract Specialist and COR for the U.S. Navy and the Department of Health and Human Services / Indian Health Service, where she worked on more than $7.7 billion in federal contracts across R&D, IT, commercial, medical, major weapon-systems, and engineering programs. She draws on that experience, along with her law degree and MBA studies, to teach federal contracting courses that focus on the “why” behind the “how” — so participants leave understanding not just the rules, but the reasoning behind them. An award-winning DAU/WarU (DAWIA and FAI) instructor, she has taught more than 1,000 federal acquisition workforce students across 20-plus agencies. As a DAU/WarU-equivalent provider, Phoenix Canyon teaches this curriculum to the same standard the federal workforce is held to.
Best for: federal contractors who want a deep, working understanding of how federal acquisition works — new entrants building a federal contracting company; growing firms that want to compete smarter; and contract, capture, proposal, program, and business-development staff who need to understand the government side. No prior federal-contracting background is assumed; the program builds from the ground up.
Format: The certification is a five-module program — ten days of training in total — delivered in person or virtually, scheduled around your business. You complete the modules at a pace that works for you. Phoenix Canyon issues a certificate of completion for each module documenting the training hours, CEUs, and CLPs earned, and the Federal Contracting Professional Certification upon successful completion of all five modules. Organizations may apply these credits toward continuing-education, professional-development, or continuous-learning requirements at their discretion. Check with your workplace to confirm how they apply to you.
Pricing is set per engagement. Cost depends on your delivery format (in person or virtual) and the size of your group. Every engagement includes the full five-module certification program. Contact Phoenix Canyon to request a quote.
This certification program is for federal contractors who want to understand government contracting the way the government does — from the inside out. Most contractor training teaches you how to register on SAM, find opportunities, and write a proposal. This program gives you the same high-quality training that government personnel receive, with curriculum based on the actual CON 1100 - 1400 courses given to federal contracting personnel — and taught by the same instructor (Phoenix Canyon is an official DAU/WarU-equivalent training provider, and your instructor has personally taught federal contracting to more than 1,000 federal acquisition personnel spanning more than 20 federal agencies).
This program was designed to fill that genuine gap in the market, giving contractors an opportunity to train at the same level as government contracting personnel. Rather than a surface-level understanding, here you will learn to think like a contracting officer: you'll know what the government should be doing at every stage and why — so you'll be able to spot when they get it wrong. And when you spot an error, you'll know what to do, because you also learn your rights as a federal contractor and the remedies available to you. This insider's knowledge also helps you strategically: a true understanding of what the government is looking for during each phase of the acquisition process, how to position yourself for success, and where the risks lie for contractors within the system. This curriculum has everything you need to turn your team into subject-matter experts.
The full certification is ten days of training across five modules, which you complete at a pace that works for your business.
The certification is built from five modules:
Module 1 — Foundations: How Federal Contracting Works and How the Government Thinks (2 days · covers CON 1100 competencies)
The landscape and the mindset. How the federal acquisition system is structured, who the players are, and — most importantly — how to think like the contracting officer across the table. You'll learn how to research the rules yourself: the FAR and Revolutionary FAR Overhaul (RFO), class deviations, Practitioner Albums, the FAR Companion, and the free government resources most contractors don't know exist. This is the foundation everything else builds on.
Module 2 — Pre-Award and Positioning (3 days · covers CON 1200 competencies)
Where contracts are won or lost — and the highest-value module for most contractors. How the government plans an acquisition, shapes requirements, conducts market research, and builds a solicitation. You'll learn to read a solicitation the way the person who wrote it intended, to understand the acquisition strategy behind it, and to position your company before the RFP ever drops.
Module 3 — Award and Source Selection (2 days · covers CON 1300 competencies)
How award decisions are actually made. How the government evaluates offers, conducts source selection, and documents the decision — so you understand exactly how you're being judged and how to make your proposal stronger. You'll also learn what genuinely makes an award protest-worthy, from someone who evaluated proposals from the inside.
Module 4 — Post-Award and Administration (2 days · covers CON 1400 competencies)
What happens after you win. Contract administration, performance management, modifications, payments, and closeout — the daily reality of performing a federal contract, and where contractors most often run into trouble they could have avoided.
Module 5 — Federal Contractor Rights & Remedies (1 day)
The capstone the government curriculum doesn't include. Your rights and remedies as a contractor: data rights, protests, disputes, terminations, requests for equitable adjustment, claims, and the changes that drive most of them — plus how to manage your risk across the whole relationship. You'll learn one of the most valuable lessons a contractor can know: who is authorized to make changes to contract performance (so your invoices don’t get left unpaid) and what to do if an unauthorized person attempts to change your contract requirements. This is the module built entirely around protecting you.
To earn the Federal Contracting Professional Certification, you complete all five modules and pass the proficiency exam for each one. The exams aren't a formality — they're how the certification stays meaningful. This isn't a badge you buy by sitting through a webinar; it's a credential you earn by demonstrating you actually understand federal contracting, module by module, the same way the government's own workforce proves itself along the way.
These Federal Contracting Professional Certification courses are taught by Melinda Milheim, JD, who spent her federal career in the acquisition workforce. She served as a Contract Specialist and COR for the U.S. Navy and the Department of Health and Human Services / Indian Health Service, where she worked on more than $7.7 billion in federal contracts across R&D, IT, commercial, medical, major weapon-systems, and engineering programs. She draws on that experience, along with her law degree and MBA studies, to teach federal contracting courses that focus on the “why” behind the “how” — so participants leave understanding not just the rules, but the reasoning behind them. An award-winning DAU/WarU (DAWIA and FAI) instructor, she has taught more than 1,000 federal acquisition workforce students across 20-plus agencies. As a DAU/WarU-equivalent provider, Phoenix Canyon teaches this curriculum to the same standard the federal workforce is held to.
Best for: federal contractors who want a deep, working understanding of how federal acquisition works — new entrants building a federal contracting company; growing firms that want to compete smarter; and contract, capture, proposal, program, and business-development staff who need to understand the government side. No prior federal-contracting background is assumed; the program builds from the ground up.
Format: The certification is a five-module program — ten days of training in total — delivered in person or virtually, scheduled around your business. You complete the modules at a pace that works for you. Phoenix Canyon issues a certificate of completion for each module documenting the training hours, CEUs, and CLPs earned, and the Federal Contracting Professional Certification upon successful completion of all five modules. Organizations may apply these credits toward continuing-education, professional-development, or continuous-learning requirements at their discretion. Check with your workplace to confirm how they apply to you.
Pricing is set per engagement. Cost depends on your delivery format (in person or virtual) and the size of your group. Every engagement includes the full five-module certification program. Contact Phoenix Canyon to request a quote.

