561210FAC decision board
How to pressure-test 561210FAC
Before adding or selling through a SIN, pressure-test the scope, proof, pricing, buyer language, and post-award maintenance story.
What 561210FAC is really for
Operations, maintenance, and repair of federal real property, from individual buildings to large multi-facility complexes.
The practical question is not whether the company can describe itself broadly enough to touch this lane. The better question is whether a buyer would naturally use 561210FAC language to buy the work.
Where this SIN tends to help
Facilities operators with disciplined maintenance processes, staffing models, safety controls, subcontractor management, and asset support.
It works best when the company can show the work commercially, name the deliverables, and explain the team or product model without stretching the scope.
What to prepare before using it
Facility operations history, staffing plan, safety metrics, maintenance procedures, subcontractor controls, and pricing support.
Pair that proof with clear labor categories or product records, pricing support, and a short explanation of how buyers will order the work through the Schedule.
Common trap
This is operational delivery work. A generic capability statement is not enough.
The cleanest GSA strategy is not always the broadest one. It is the one that makes the next review, quote, and buyer conversation easier.
What this looks like in practice
In action561210FAC in a real offer story
A contractor manages preventive maintenance, work orders, vendor coordination, inspection logs, and facility performance reporting.
A strong 561210FAC page in an internal offer package would connect the SIN description, labor or product data, pricing support, and buyer-facing use case into one clean story.
Add SIN noteThe mod should explain why this lane belongs on the contract
If 561210FAC is being added after award, the package should explain why the current awarded scope is not enough, what evidence supports the new lane, and how the catalog or service file will change after approval.
- Scope fit
- Commercial proof
- Pricing support
- Labor or product mapping
- Catalog follow-through
Frequently asked questions
Is 561210FAC an official sales ranking?
No. This page explains a high-utility SIN from a contractor strategy perspective. Verified sales ranking should come from GSA SSQ+ research.
Should 561210FAC be added just because it sounds related?
No. Add the SIN when scope, proof, pricing, and buyer demand are strong enough to justify the contract maintenance work.
What should I do after approval?
Check catalog data, T&C files, pricing files, internal quote templates, sales messaging, and reporting assumptions so the new scope becomes usable.