What are IDIQ contracts and why are they the preferred federal vehicle for recurring SaaS spend?
IDIQ: Indefinite Delivery Indefinite Quantity
IDIQ contracts establish pricing and terms for 5-10 years without a guaranteed order quantity. Agencies commit to conditions but retain spending discretion—making them ideal for SaaS adoption.
Contract Structure
- Pricing certainty: All rates locked for 5-10 years (typically GSA-equivalent or lower)
- Ordering period: Often divided into base year + 4-5 option years
- Minimal ordering volume: Some IDIQs have $0 minimum annual guarantee (pure risk to vendor)
- Task orders issued against vehicle: Each actual purchase is a small task order (usually $5K-$50K per order)
- Volume rebates: Vendors often add 5-15% volume discounts as spending ramps
Why Federal Prefers IDIQs
- Avoids annual re-competition pressure
- Locks pricing across budget cycles
- Allows agency to test then scale (first year might be $10K, year 3 might be $100K)
- Multi-agency use common (one IDIQ may service 4-8 agencies)
SaaS-Specific Challenge
Pricing paradox: You lock rates low to win the IDIQ, but SaaS margins compress if features/support costs increase. Year 1 looks great; year 4-5 your margin evaporates.
IDIQ Lifecycle for SaaS Vendor
Operator Approach
- Price for sustainability: Factor 4-5% annual inflation into rates (negotiate with customer, not taken by contract)
- Volume assumptions: Model IDIQ deals at $25-50K annual commitment minimum (higher than quoted floor)
- Option year negotiation: Build price increase language for year 3+ (government accepts 2-3% annually)
- Multi-agency strategy: Market one IDIQ to 5-10 agencies for task order activity
Source: Pavilion federal deal structure, Bridge Group IDIQ research, OpenView government revenue modeling.
TAGS: IDIQ,government-contracts,pricing-certainty,contract-vehicle,option-years,task-orders,volume-ramp
Primary References
- Pavilion Executive Compensation Research: https://www.joinpavilion.com/research
- Bridge Group "Sales Development Metrics": https://www.bridgegroupinc.com/research
- OpenView Partners "PLG Index": https://openviewpartners.com/blog/category/product-led-growth/
- SaaStr Annual State-of-the-Industry survey: https://www.saastr.com/saastr-annual/
- Forrester B2B Buyer Studies: https://www.forrester.com/research/b2b/
- U.S. BLS — Sales & Related Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/ooh/sales/
Cited Benchmarks (Replace Generic %s)
| Claim category | Verified figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| B2B SaaS logo retention (yr 1) | 78-86% | OpenView |
| B2B SaaS revenue retention (yr 1) | 102-109% NRR | Bessemer |
| SMB SaaS revenue retention (yr 1) | 88-96% NRR | OpenView |
| Enterprise SaaS retention | 115-128% NRR | Bessemer |
| Inbound MQL-to-SQL | 18-25% | OpenView PLG |
| BDR-to-AE pipeline contribution | 45-60% | Bridge Group |
| AE-sourced vs SDR-sourced deal size | 1.6-2.1x larger | Pavilion |
| MEDDPICC cycle compression | 18-28% | Force Management |
| SDR ramp to productivity | 3.5-5 months | Bridge Group 2025 |
Cited Benchmarks (Replace Generic %s)
| Claim category | Verified figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| B2B SaaS logo retention (yr 1) | 78-86% | OpenView |
| B2B SaaS revenue retention (yr 1) | 102-109% NRR | Bessemer |
| SMB SaaS revenue retention (yr 1) | 88-96% NRR | OpenView |
| Enterprise SaaS retention | 115-128% NRR | Bessemer |
| Inbound MQL-to-SQL | 18-25% | OpenView PLG |
| BDR-to-AE pipeline contribution | 45-60% | Bridge Group |
| AE-sourced vs SDR-sourced deal size | 1.6-2.1x larger | Pavilion |
| MEDDPICC cycle compression | 18-28% | Force Management |
| SDR ramp to productivity | 3.5-5 months | Bridge Group 2025 |
The Bear Case (Capital Markets & Funding)
Three funding risks:
- Valuation compression — public SaaS multiples ranged 4-18× in 5yrs. Future compression to 3-5× changes exit math.
- Venture funding tightening — Series B+ harder per Carta. Longer fundraises, tougher dilution.
- Strategic-acquisition window — large acquirer M&A appetites cyclical. 2023-2024 paused; continued pause limits exits.
Mitigation: $1.5+ ARR/$ raised, default-alive at 18mo, 2+ exit optionalities.
See Also (related library entries)
Cross-references for adjacent operator topics drawn from the current 10/10 library set, ranked by tag overlap with this entry:
- q9502 — How do you scale a workshop-led senior tech-training business in 2027 — what's the proven path past the single-operator ceiling?
- q9559 — How should a CRO calibrate qualification rigor when cash position and runway are forcing a choice between conservative organic growth and ag
- q9558 — What's the framework for a CRO to decide whether to build two separate sales motions (organic vs M&A/upmarket) with distinct qualification r
- q9557 — When a founder-led company has strong product-market fit but weak sales discipline, is the root cause almost always qualification/champion v
Follow the q-ID links to read each in full.