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industry breakdown

While offensive cyber is still the biggest share of federal cyber spending by far, its a
diminishing one. Since 2011, that field, which governs agency network communications,
fell 10.5 percentage points to less than half, according to Govini. Thats made way for
smaller industry segments to grow.

SEGMENT PERCENTAGES
59.7% Q Offensive cyber R 49.2%
10.1 Q Physical security R 12.7
7.7 Q Boundary defense R 8.8
7.4 Q Secure systems engineering R 8.2
4.5 Q Endpoint defense R 7.1
3.2 Q Program management R 5.2
6.0 Q Security monitoring R 5.3

2011 $6.0B total revenue


PERCENT CHANGE

411.1%

top cyber vendors

0.25 Q Incident response R 2.3


0.50 Q Security compliance R 0.43
0.67 Q Business continuity R 0.40
0.04 Q Training and awareness R 0.35

2014 contract awards in millions

OFFENSIVE CYBER:
Supports how Department of Defense platforms and networks
communicate with one another
R The Boeing Co.: $3,308.4
R Lockheed Martin Corp.: 2,361.1
R General Dynamics Corp.: 1,849.1
R SAIC Inc.: 1,662.0
R Northrop Grumman Corp.: 1,660.8
PHYSICAL SECURITY:
Ensures the security of data centers, remote server centers and any
other facilities housing sensitive or classified data
R Hensel Phelps Construction Co. Inc.: $1,257.9
R Balfour Beatty-DPR-Big-D joint venture (JV): 1,234.3
R Clark/McCarthy JV: 447.4
R Computer Sciences Corp.: 405.6
R Clark-Hunt JV: 399.4
BOUNDARY DEFENSE:
Controls access to a federal network and addresses access points
that transfer cyber threats
R Northrop Grumman Corp.: $849.8
R SRA International Inc.: 234.2
R Booz Allen Hamilton Corp.: 209.1
R Lockheed Martin Corp.: 168.7
R Perot Systems Government Services: 158.5
SECURE SYSTEMS ENGINEERING: Ensures a network is secure
and its architecture is built to limit vulnerabilities
R Northrop Grumman Corp.: $564.4
R Dell Inc.: 353.0
R SRA International Inc.: 249.1
R Booz Allen Hamilton Corp.: 193.7
R Computer Sciences Corp.: 181.7
SECURITY MONITORING:
Conducts in-depth evaluations of vulnerabilities to a network,
identifies weaknesses and ensures mitigating procedures are in place
should an attack occur
R Northrop Grumman Corp.: $441.5
R Aleut Communication Services LLC: 268.3
R Lockheed Martin Corp.: 252.3
R SRA International Inc.: 197.0
R Dell Inc.: 180.5
PROGRAM MANAGEMENT:
Offers program management services in support of the other 10
subcategories listed here
R Booz Allen Hamilton Corp.: $318.6
R SRA International Inc.: 235.3
R Computer Sciences Corp.: 113.0
R STG Inc.: 63.3
R PAE Inc.: 60.3

2014 $30.8B total revenue

INCIDENT RESPONSE:
Develops organized approaches and protocol to address and
manage the aftermath of a breach, while identifying the roots of an
attack
R SRA International Inc.: $184.3
R SAIC Inc.: 181.4
R Lockheed Martin Corp.: 147.0
R Aleut Communication Services LLC: 89.4
R Computer Sciences Corp.: 85.4
TRAINING AND AWARENESS:
Largely provides consulting in support of best cybersecurity
practices by agency employees
R Computer Sciences Corp.: $170.7
R Network Design Inc.: 18.9
R Cyberdata Technologies Inc.: 16.8
R Tyonek Native Corp.: 15.7
R Chenega Corp.: 10.8
ENDPOINT DEFENSE:
Secures computers, smartphones, tablets and any other number of
network-connected devices from cyber threats and prevents them
from introducing new cyber threats to the overall IT environment
R Computer Sciences Corp.: $85.4
R BAE Systems PLC: 74.6
R Harris Corp.: 41.2
R Orbital ATK Inc.: 41.0
R IBM Corp.: 34.8
SECURITY COMPLIANCE:
Ensures agency compliance dictated by federal standards
and legislation, including FISMA, HIPAA, NIST, PCI and Section 508
requirements
R Booz Allen Hamilton Corp.: $44.8
R PricewaterhouseCoopers: 42.8
R Deloitte Consulting LLP: 31.9
R ManTech International Corp.: 24.4
R Nakamoto Group Inc.: 22.8
BUSINESS CONTINUITY:
Ensures the availability of critical agency functions in the event of a
cyber attack
R Social & Scientific Systems Inc.: $38.5
R IBM Corp.: 32.4
R Quality Software Services Inc.: 29.6
R Booz Allen Hamilton Corp.: 29.1
R Computer Sciences Corp.: 27.7

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