Alpha Omega Wins 2026 ACG Deal of the Year Award

Dual Strategic Acquisitions Drive Growth, Innovation, and Federal Mission Impact

VIENNA, Va., June 5, 2026 — Alpha Omega, a leading federal technology solutions firm specializing in AI-driven modernization, digital transformation, and cybersecurity, has been named the winner of the 2026 ACG National Capital Deal of the Year Award (Revenue Category: $50M–$250M).

The recognition follows Alpha Omega’s transformational acquisition of Macro Solutions and SeKON, completed on the same day in 2025. The transactions expanded the company’s scale by more than 60 percent, strengthened its position across national security and defense health markets, and accelerated its evolution into a premier federal technology solutions firm.

Presented annually by the Association for Corporate Growth (ACG), the Corporate Growth Awards honor companies, executives, and deal teams that create enterprise value through mergers and acquisitions, strategic partnerships, organic growth, and capital investment. 

Since its founding in 2016, Alpha Omega has achieved sustained growth, earning a place on the Inc. 5000 list for eight consecutive years and surpassing $200 million in annual revenue in 2025. The company accomplished this growth through disciplined execution, strong customer delivery, and strategic acquisitions.

“Our strategy has always been to build a company that meets the federal government’s modernization challenges with speed, technical depth, and measurable impact,” said Gautam Ijoor, CEO of Alpha Omega. “The ACG Deal of the Year Award recognizes the transformational impact of bringing together three organizations with complementary strengths. The result is a stronger Alpha Omega with expanded capabilities, deeper expertise, innovative intellectual property, and a greater capacity to serve our customers.”

Building a Stronger Federal Technology Solutions Company 

The acquisitions expanded Alpha Omega’s portfolio with new contracts, specialized subject matter expertise, differentiated technology, and active mission support across the Army, Navy, Air Force, Defense Health Agency, and agencies within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The combined organization is also positioned to compete more effectively for large-scale opportunities, including GSA Alliant III and Army MAPS.

In 2025, Alpha Omega further strengthened its market position through the development of the Continuum Automation Framework, a suite of automation accelerators designed to help agencies modernize faster, reduce technical debt, and improve mission resilience. The company also achieved CMMI Maturity Level 5 for Development and Services, reflecting the highest standards of engineering maturity, process discipline, and delivery excellence.

Alpha Omega continues to earn workplace recognition from organizations including Virginia Business, The Washington Post, WTOP, and USA Today for its commitment to employee development, leadership, and mission-driven culture. 

Federal Oral Presentations: The Proposal Manager’s Playbook

Transitioning from a Traditional Proposal Shop into an Orals Presentation Powerhouse


At Alpha Omega, we believe a rising tide lifts all ships. We’re committed to sharing expertise that strengthens the entire govcon community—including hard-won lessons from inside our own teams. This post comes from Samantha Cash, Alpha Omega’s Vice President of Proposals and Capture. With more than a decade of experience and $1B+ in federal, state & local wins, Samantha brings a practitioner’s perspective to one of the most pressure-packed challenges in govcon: federal oral presentations.

As demand for oral presentations increases in federal solicitations, capture and proposal managers are feeling the pinch. Growth and delivery SMEs’ calendars are already packed—and then the government asks your team to produce an oral presentation that’s accurate, compliant, compelling, and delivered flawlessly by busy people who don’t spend most of their time working on proposals. For your next trick, accomplish all of the above in as little as a week.

That’s the reality many of us are operating in now:

  • Presenters are overcommitted and distracted, often responsible for delivery to the customer (gulp), while also being on the hook for accuracy and compliance (double gulp).
  • Evaluators are saturated. They may sit through 10, 20, or even 30+ sessions. They’ve seen strong solutions and heard from smart presenters. They’re hard to impress.
  • Capture and proposal teams lose “control” at the moment it matters most. We thrive when we can iterate, refine, and shape the final product. In orals, the “final product” happens live—and often without the proposal team in the room.

In response, I developed what I call the Orals Powerhouse: a repeatable presentation engine designed to help capture and proposal teams manage complexity, control messaging, adapt in real time, and protect outcomes, even though the presentation itself is ultimately delivered by others.

1) Start with the “foundation”: compliance, accuracy, and people

Whether you’re responding in writing, via orals, or through a technical challenge, the foundation never changes: compliance and accuracy are non-negotiable.

So why are agencies asking for more orals now? One reason is straightforward: AI and automation have helped many vendors produce faster, cleaner written responses. When written scores tighten, evaluators increasingly want to see the human element: the team that will actually show up, collaborate, and deliver.

AI can absolutely support oral prep. But only people can walk into that (possibly virtual) room and earn confidence through how they explain, connect, and respond under pressure. That means your “foundation” must include both the content and the humans delivering it.

Powerhouse mindset: treat your oral like a proposal you can’t revise after submission—because you can’t. Your compliance mapping, message validation, and solution accuracy must be locked before you ever worry about polish.

2) Open the “door”: your first 90 seconds must create a “wow”

Evaluators are tired. They’re comparing you—consciously or not—to the last 20 teams.

When evaluators “walk through your front door,” you want the HGTV reaction: “Wow. I can’t wait to see the rest of this place.”

That requires discipline in the opening:

  • Lead with discriminators early (and repeat them throughout).
  • Put recognizable, relevant faces up front—people the customer knows or people who are instantly credible in the customer’s mission space.
  • Make your first minute feel intentional, not like a warmed-over intro slide.

A practical way to sharpen your opener is to add a question to your mock evaluation form: “What (if anything) caught your attention in the first three minutes? What can we cut?” If your team can’t name what created confidence immediately, you haven’t engineered a strong enough “door.”

3) Build the “walls”: a memorable framework and a team that performs as one

Once you transition beyond the opening slides—team intros and the high-level approach—it’s time to stand up the solution. In other words: build the house.

A sturdy solution needs a framework that’s repeatable, memorable, and easy for evaluators to follow. That’s especially important because oral presentations have a structural disadvantage that proposal teams don’t always plan for.

The federal oral presentation problem no one talks about

Once you move past your framework slide, the evaluators no longer have it in front of them. Unlike a written proposal—where the structure is visible on every page—oral sessions are live, fast, and cognitively demanding.

So do your team (and evaluators) a favor: make your framework easy to recall by tying it to something familiar:

  • an acronym,
  • a recognizable concept,
  • a metaphor,
  • or a visual model that sticks.

If you want evaluators to remember your approach after 60–90 minutes, don’t make them work for it.

Make your framework memorable: build a “house”

One tactic that works well is a “House” (or “Powerhouse”) framework—because it naturally reinforces itself:

  • “Now that we’ve laid the foundation…”
  • “Let’s talk about the structure and supporting beams…”
  • “Here’s how we keep the lights on—our operations model…”
  • “And this is how we secure the doors—our risk and cybersecurity approach…”

The point isn’t the house specifically. The point is repetition with purpose. Your framework is your process. Use it continuously so evaluators don’t lose the thread.

The presentation team is not the same as the presenter list

It’s tempting to build your oral team by defaulting to:

  • the most credentialed SMEs,
  • the most senior leaders,
  • the most certified experts,
  • the most polished speakers.

But a winning oral team isn’t a collection of strong individuals. A winning oral team performs like a unit.

Evaluators aren’t only assessing what you know—they’re assessing whether your firm can fuse into and strengthen their federal team. In written proposals we talk about “one-voicing.” In orals, the equivalent is “one-team.” Evaluators should experience a coordinated story, not a relay race of disconnected SMEs.

Don’t skip this: get an executive champion (full stop)

If you take only one action from this post, make it this: do not proceed without an executive champion.

Oral presentations create unique pressure:

  • accountability spikes,
  • schedules tighten,
  • presenter availability becomes fragile,
  • rehearsal time is always less than you want.

An executive champion provides what the opportunity team often can’t manufacture on its own:

  • clear pathways for prioritization and deconfliction,
  • fast escalation and decision support,
  • motivation and recognition that keeps the team engaged,
  • visible organizational commitment to the pursuit.

If the organization treats orals like “just another meeting,” your presenters will too.

The real fix for presenter challenges: bench before the bid

Common presenter issues are predictable:

  • busy and overcommitted,
  • highly compelling but not technical enough,
  • highly technical but not compelling,
  • unclear what they’re actually signing up for.

The mistake is trying to solve these problems after the RFP drops. The Powerhouse approach is to build the bench before the bid.

Ask yourself: Can you name the most dynamic presenters in your organization right now? If not, fix that. Partner with HR/Talent Acquisition, your PMO, and technical leadership to identify and grow a pipeline.

Low-stakes practice environments are everywhere:

  • internal tech demos,
  • mini-presentations during solutioning,
  • recruiting events,
  • leadership briefings,
  • lunch-and-learns with live Q&A,
  • short all-hands presentations (2–5 minutes still counts).

The first time you observe someone being “on” shouldn’t be after the RFP drops.

Treat oral presenter selection like staffing a critical role

A well-spoken SME isn’t enough. Your oral presenters must be:

  • available,
  • mentally present,
  • reliable under pressure,
  • willing (ideally eager) to participate.

To create transparency and consistency, give presenters a job description, not just a calendar block:

  • what they’re expected to deliver,
  • timeframe and commitment,
  • the support system they’ll receive,
  • explicit sign-off from the presenter and their manager.

Then add a simple but powerful step: a 20-minute interview/audition, even for “known quantities.” If someone can’t commit to a short interview, it’s a red flag. It also gives opportunity leadership a shared view of fit, schedule, and motivation.

Include a 2–5 minute micro-presentation. You’ll learn instantly whether they can explain clearly, command attention, speak in customer language, and accept coaching. Most importantly, the interview empowers the presenter: it invites them into the process instead of assigning them another task.

4) Put on the “roof”: engineer team chemistry (and install gutters)

Team dynamics don’t happen by accident. If you put five smart people in a room and hope chemistry emerges, you’re taking an unnecessary risk.

Instead:

  • build bonds early, before final questions are released,
  • use mini-team assignments that mix personalities and backgrounds, not just expertise,
  • encourage peer-to-peer feedback before formal mocks.

Then install “gutters” by designating culture stewards: people who safeguard positivity, redirect friction, and pull quieter voices forward.

Hard-won advice: if someone is consistently negative, resistant to feedback, or unreliable, don’t wait it out. Address it early and make changes if needed. One destabilizing presenter can undo weeks of preparation.

5) Lay the wiring: empower presenters with a single-source Speaker Packet

One of the biggest pain points in orals is “losing control” as content moves into presenters’ hands. Reduce friction by empowering presenters incrementally with a tool that keeps messaging centralized.

Use a Speaker Packet: a role-specific, living document provided as a single link. Don’t make busy SMEs hunt for information—make it easy to succeed.

A solid packet typically includes:

  • presenter talk track (easy to navigate),
  • opportunity links (including the deck),
  • client environment, pain points, and win themes (kept current as intel evolves),
  • transcripts or summaries from practices (record rehearsals; use AI to generate role-specific summaries),
  • schedule and day-of logistics.

Pro tip: link to a separate “day-of logistics” file so you can update one source and everyone stays current—and you can see who’s opening the latest guidance.

6) Add the breaker box: live controls for game-day risk

A strong script and technically sound solution aren’t enough. Orals require live safeguards because things go wrong in real time.

Plan for the predictable failures:

  • Running over time: assign a dedicated timer (often the lightest speaker) and use a real-time text thread to cue pivots and cuts.
  • Tech issues: put IT on standby and pre-plan backups who can take over if a system fails.
  • Missing compliance content: your emcee (opener/closer and Q&A router) should actively monitor coverage to ensure requirements are met live.

Orals are performance plus execution. The breaker box is what keeps small issues from becoming catastrophic.

7) Don’t ignore “curb appeal”—even if it’s not in the criteria

Slides may not be “evaluable,” but they matter. Audio quality matters. Camera framing, lighting, and background distractions matter. These details shape evaluator experience—and therefore credibility.

Standardize what you can:

  • invest early in slide quality and practice navigation (“top right, bottom left…”),
  • standardize microphones where possible,
  • rehearse in the same rooms and platforms presenters will use on game day,
  • record a rehearsal and watch a few minutes together so the team can spot and fix issues.

Build the engine, not the scramble

Oral presentations are increasing. Teams that treat them as an occasional scramble will feel that pressure every time. Teams that build a repeatable engine—a true Orals Powerhouse—will get faster, calmer, and more consistent with each pursuit.

Start building your Orals Powerhouse now, before the next RFP forces your hand.

Federal Automation Framework – Reducing Costs & Modernizing Government

Introduction: Why a Federal Automation Framework Is Essential Now

A federal automation framework is no longer optional—it is essential for agencies facing mounting cost pressures, cybersecurity threats, and rising citizen expectations. As the federal government works to modernize legacy systems and eliminate wasteful spending, innovation must move beyond isolated pilots to structured, measurable transformation. Innovation, especially digital automation, can deliver operational efficiency, cost reductions, and enhance public service outcomes when applied purposefully.

In this blog, we’ll evaluate the cost challenges of current federal systems, explain how solutions like Alpha Omega’s Continuum Automation Framework provide measurable benefits, and demonstrate alignment with major federal innovation priorities and Executive Orders from the Trump Administration. 

The Problem: Federal Systems Are Costly, Outdated, and Inefficient 

Legacy Systems Drain Budgets 

Federal agencies continue to rely heavily on aging information technology systems that are costly to maintain, operate, and secure. According to a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report on IT spending: for FY 2024, approximately $74 billion, nearly 78% of the federal IT budget, was devoted to operations and maintenance of existing systems, versus just $21 billion for development and modernization.  

Security and Operational Risks 

Legacy technology often lacks modern security features, exposing agencies to cyber threats and operational failures. These inefficiencies also contribute to poor customer experience for citizens interacting with government services. 

Billions Wasted on Contracts and Grants 

Beyond core IT systems, federal spending on contracts and grants is so extensive that recent policy efforts like Executive Order 14222, Implementing the President’s “Department of Government Efficiency” Cost Efficiency Initiative, have been issued specifically to curb waste and enforce accountability. EO 14222 directs agencies to review and reduce unnecessary costs tied to federal contracts, grants, and loans, a systemic response to rampant inefficiencies in federal spending.  

The Benefits of Innovation: Beyond Cost Cutting 

Innovation in government delivers value far beyond reduced spending. Some of the major benefits include:

1. Operational Efficiency and Time Savings – Automated workflows and intelligent systems eliminate manual processing, drastically reducing cycle times and human errors.

2. Enhanced Security and ComplianceModernized systems improve defense against cyber threats and provide built-in compliance features that reduce audit risk.

3. Better Citizen ExperiencesFaster, more reliable systems deliver more responsive services to the public, boosting trust and satisfaction.

4. Scalability and Future Readiness Innovative technologies can scale to meet future demands without exponential cost increases. 

Policy Alignment: Trump Administration Executive Orders and Innovation

The Trump Administration’s second term has included a series of Executive Orders that signal a renewed federal priority on efficiency, accountability, and technological leadership. Two major EO initiatives relevant to this blog are: 

Executive Order 14222: Cost Efficiency Initiative 

Signed on February 26, 2025, EO 14222 directs agencies to transform federal spending on contracts, grants, and loans by implementing centralized technology systems to record and justify every payment under covered contracts and grants. It mandates review and possible termination or modification of existing agreements to reduce spending or reallocate for better efficiency.  

This EO explicitly supports the use of modern technology tools to improve oversight and fiscal discipline, a natural fit for automation frameworks that track and optimize processes. 

Executive Order 14179: AI Leadership and Innovation 

EO 14179, “Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence”, is designed to strengthen U.S. global competitiveness in AI by rescinding policies that constrain innovation and establishing plans to accelerate responsible AI deployment in government.  

Together, EO 14222 and EO 14179 send a clear signal: the federal government must contain costs while embracing modern technology, including AI and automation, to drive efficiency and strategic advantage. 

Enter Alpha Omega’s Continuum Automation Framework 

So how can federal agencies turn these goals and mandates into operational reality? 

Alpha Omega’s Continuum Automation Framework is a holistic, scalable approach designed to transition agencies from costly legacy systems to efficient, modern, automated operations. 

What is the Continuum Automation Framework?

At its core, Continuum is a modular automation framework built to integrate with legacy infrastructures and modern platforms alike to design, generate, modernize, move data, and prove compliance – delivering total mission automation.

It supports: 

  • Process automation 
  • AI and machine learning integration 
  • Cross-system orchestration 
  • Centralized workflow management 
  • Real-time monitoring and analytics 

This combination makes it possible to deliver rapid ROI while laying the foundation for future innovation. 

Step-by-Step: How Continuum Delivers Efficiency

Alpha Omega’s Continuum Automation Framework operationalizes modernization through four integrated accelerators—Design, Code, Connect, and Secure—each engineered to reduce cost, compress timelines, and improve compliance outcomes.

1. Strategic Discovery with Continuum Design

Continuum Design rapidly inventories systems, maps workflows, and identifies automation candidates using structured architectural modeling and AI-assisted requirements analysis. 

Agencies leveraging Continuum Design typically see: 

  • 85% faster development timelines 
  • Standardized architecture artifacts generated in days instead of months 
  • Early identification of redundant or high-cost workflows 

By front-loading intelligence into modernization strategy, agencies eliminate unnecessary scope and align transformation directly with cost-efficiency mandates under EO 14222. 

2. Accelerated Modernization with Continuum Code

Rather than rewriting entire systems from scratch, Continuum Code automates application refactoring, transformation, and generation—modernizing legacy systems incrementally. 

Capabilities include: 

  • Automated code conversion and transformation 
  • AI-assisted development pipelines 
  • Infrastructure-as-Code automation 

Measured results include: 

  • 40–60% reduction in application modernization costs 
  • 75% faster release cycles 
  • Reduced defect rates through automated testing and mathematical validation 

This allows agencies to avoid “big bang” modernization risks while accelerating delivery. 

3. Data Modernization with Continuum Connect

Continuum Connect automates data migration, transformation, and integration across legacy and modern environments. 

Capabilities include: 

  • Canonical data modeling 
  • Secure API enablement 
  • Cross-system orchestration 

Results typically include: 

  • Up to 90% faster data migration timelines 
  • Reduced integration errors 
  • Elimination of redundant manual data reconciliation 

By stabilizing and standardizing data flows, agencies unlock AI capabilities without introducing operational fragility. 

4. Embedded Compliance with Continuum Secure

Security and compliance are often the largest bottlenecks in modernization. Continuum Secure automates evidence collection, control validation, and compliance monitoring across the system lifecycle. 

Agencies utilizing Continuum Secure have achieved: 

  • 90% reduction in manual ATO processes 
  • Automated audit documentation generation 
  • Continuous monitoring dashboards replacing manual reporting 

This directly supports federal mandates for fiscal discipline and oversight while improving security posture. 

5. Scalable Governance and Continuous Optimization

The framework integrates performance dashboards, KPIs, and policy-driven automation to ensure continuous improvement. 

Across enterprise implementations, agencies frequently realize: 

  • Double-digit percentage reductions in operational costs within 12–24 months 
  • Reduced contract overruns through automation-based tracking 
  • Lower long-term maintenance burdens 

This phased, accelerator-driven model ensures modernization delivers measurable efficiency gains while aligning with federal priorities on transparency, accountability, and innovation.

6. Fast Path to Procurement

Modernization speed is often constrained not by technology—but by acquisition timelines. Alpha Omega’s Fast Path to Procurement addresses this challenge directly by providing a streamlined acquisition ecosystem that enables agencies to move from requirement to award with significantly reduced friction. 

Fast Path leverages pre-competed, readily awardable solutions accessible through: 

  • Commercial Solutions Openings (CSOs) 
  • Other Transaction Authorities (OTAs) 
  • SBIR Phase III pathways 
  • Multiple commercial marketplaces 

By aligning with current acquisition policy directives and using existing contracting mechanisms, agencies can accelerate time to award while maintaining compliance, transparency, and fiscal discipline. 

Quantifying the Value: What Agencies Can Expect 

By automating routine tasks and optimizing processes: 

  • Operational costs decrease as manual labor and waste are reduced. 
  • System maintenance burdens shrink as fewer legacy workloads persist. 
  • Fewer contract overruns and wasteful grant spending occur thanks to automated tracking and justification. 
  • Security and compliance posture improve through built-in governance controls. 

While actual savings depend on agency size and scope, automation transformations frequently yield double-digit percentage reductions in operational costs within 12–24 months. 

Real-World Use Cases Compatible with Federal Priorities 

Automating Grant and Contract Management 

  • Centralized contract payment tracking 
  • Automated justification workflows 
  • AI-assisted fraud detection 

These capabilities directly reinforce goals under EO 14222, which calls for more transparent and accountable systems.  

AI-Enabled Document Processing for Citizen Services

  • Reduces backlog 
  • Improves accuracy 
  • Speeds decisions 

This case supports federal innovation goals under EO 14179 by harnessing AI to improve operational outcomes.  

Conclusion: A Federal Automation Framework Is the Path Forward 

A federal automation framework is no longer optional—it is essential for agencies seeking to modernize while controlling costs and strengthening accountability. With the majority of federal IT budgets consumed by maintaining legacy systems, structural efficiency must replace incremental fixes. 

Executive Orders 14222 and 14179 reinforce the mandate: reduce waste, improve oversight, and accelerate responsible AI adoption. Meeting these objectives requires more than policy alignment—it requires scalable execution. 

Alpha Omega’s Continuum Automation Framework, supported by Fast Path to Procurement, enables agencies to move from strategy to measurable impact—reducing operational costs, improving compliance, and accelerating modernization without prolonged acquisition delays. 

Innovation in government is not about chasing technology trends. It is about delivering mission outcomes with greater efficiency, resilience, and fiscal discipline. A structured federal automation framework turns modernization into a strategic advantage—not a recurring expense. 

AI Modernization for Federal Agencies

AI modernization for federal agencies is not the shortcut we hoped for.

Across the federal enterprise, agencies are racing to adopt artificial intelligence to automate decisions, accelerate analysis, and improve operational tempo. Yet many AI initiatives stall, underperform, or fail to operationalize.

The reason isn’t the algorithms.

It’s the legacy systems underneath them.

AI modernization for federal agencies cannot succeed when intelligence is layered onto brittle architectures, siloed data, and manual workflows. In national security and mission-critical environments—where reliability, auditability, and resilience are non-negotiable—modernization must come before intelligence. More precisely, AI must be paired with a deliberate architectural transformation that prepares systems to support intelligence at scale.

I call this transformation a legacy lift.

What is AI modernization for federal agencies?

AI modernization for federal agencies is the process of integrating artificial intelligence into mission systems by first modernizing data, architecture, security, and workflows—ensuring AI operates securely, compliantly, and at operational scale.

Why AI Modernization fails without legacy system modernization.

Most government mission systems were never designed to support AI.
They were built to:

  • Execute deterministic, rules-based workflows 
  • Store data in rigid schemas 
  • Prioritize stability over adaptability 

AI-driven systems demand the opposite: 

  • Continuous, near–real-time data ingestion 
  • Flexible integration patterns 
  • Observability and feedback loops 
  • Human-in-the-loop accountability 

When agencies attempt to “bolt on” AI to legacy platforms, they encounter predictable failure modes: 

  • Inconsistent or incomplete data pipelines 
  • Latency that undermines real-time decision support 
  • Security gaps introduced by shadow integrations 
  • Compliance challenges driven by opaque model behavior 

Rather than compensating for weaknesses, AI amplifies them. Without foundational modernization, intelligence becomes fragile, unscalable, and difficult to trust. 

What is a Legacy Lift?

legacy lift is a targeted modernization approach that prepares federal mission systems for AI by improving data readiness, modularity, security, and human oversight—without requiring a full system rewrite or multi-year pause on delivery. 

The goal is to decouple, stabilize, and standardize just enough of the underlying architecture to enable intelligence-driven outcomes safely and sustainably. 

A successful legacy lift focuses on four foundational layers. 

Layer 1: Data readiness before intelligence 

AI is only as effective as the data it consumes. Yet many mission systems still rely on: 

  • Batch updates instead of real-time feeds 
  • Hard-coded, brittle integrations 
  • Inconsistent data definitions across systems 

A legacy lift prioritizes: 

  • Canonical data models 
  • Secure, API-driven data access 
  • Data lineage and provenance tracking 
  • Clear ownership and stewardship 

Without these foundations, AI outputs cannot be trusted—especially in environments that require auditability, oversight, and defensibility.  

Layer 2: Modular architecture that can evolve 

Monolithic systems resist change. AI requires experimentation.
Modernized mission systems should: 

  • Expose functionality through services and APIs 
  • Separate data, logic, and presentation layers 
  • Allow AI components to be swapped, tuned, or retired without disrupting operations 

This modularity enables agencies to test and deploy AI responsibly—introducing intelligence incrementally without destabilizing mission-critical workflows. 

Layer 3: Built-in security and compliance 

In national security contexts, AI must operate within: 

  • Zero Trust principles 
  • Continuous monitoring requirements 
  • RMF, FISMA, and emerging AI governance mandates 

A legacy lift integrates security and compliance into the architecture itself, not as after-the-fact controls. This includes: 

  • Identity-aware data access 
  • Policy-driven authorization 
  • Automated evidence generation for audits 

AI systems that cannot explain their behavior or prove compliance will not scale—regardless of their technical sophistication. 

Layer 4: Human-centered AI integration 

AI should accelerate human decision-making, not replace it.
Modernized systems must support: 

  • Explainable outputs 
  • Clear confidence indicators 
  • Human override and escalation paths 

In operational environments where decisions carry real-world consequences, trust is built when operators understand not just what the system recommends—but why.  

How long does an ATO take without modernization?

In many federal environments, obtaining an Authorization to Operate (ATO) can take six to eighteen months. These prolonged timelines delay innovation, increase system risk, and discourage iterative improvement. 

Legacy lifts that embed security, automation, and continuous monitoring early in the lifecycle enable agencies to dramatically shorten approval cycles—moving from point-in-time authorization toward continuous authorization models that support faster delivery without compromising compliance. 

How can Agencies reduce risk when modernizing for AI?

Agencies can reduce risk when modernizing for AI by modernizing data foundations first, embedding security and compliance into system architecture, and introducing AI incrementally with human oversight and continuous monitoring.

 

What Agencies can do in the next 90 days.

Modernization does not require a blank slate. The most effective transformations start small and deliver momentum quickly.

In the next 90 days, agencies can: 

1. Identify a rapid contractual pathway and funding source to pilot AI-enabled modernization
2.
Select one mission workflow where AI could deliver value if foundational constraints were addressed
3. Define a fixed-price procurement approach for scaling successful pilots
4. Targeting 50–70% cost reductions compared to traditional modernization efforts
5. Measure success by operational outcomes—not scope or capacity 

This approach reduces risk while creating a clear path from experimentation to production. 

If we do nothing:

Without a legacy lift, agencies will continue to: 

  • Spend heavily on AI pilots that never operationalize 
  • Accumulate technical debt while chasing innovation 
  • Introduce security and compliance risk unintentionally 
  • Fall behind adversaries modernizing holistically 

AI is not a silver bullet. But when paired with deliberate modernization, it becomes a force multiplier. 

The Bottom Line

Mission modernization is no longer about replacing old systems—it’s about preparing them to think.

AI modernization for federal agencies succeeds only when legacy systems are ready to support intelligence. A legacy lift provides the path forward, enabling agencies to evolve mission systems without breaking trust, compliance, or continuity.

Alpha Omega Acquires Macro Solutions, LLC and SeKON, LLC

Alpha Omega, a leading provider of advanced technology solutions for the federal government, announced today the acquisitions of two IT contracting firms, Macro Solutions, LLC, and SeKON, LLC (formerly SeKON Enterprise, Inc.). These strategic acquisitions further advance Alpha Omega’s mission to ensure our nation’s continued global leadership.

The addition of Macro Solutions strengthens Alpha Omega’s National Security division, enhancing its technology modernization offerings within the U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, and U.S. Air Force; also building on Alpha Omega’s existing contracts within the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of State. With these combined capabilities, Alpha Omega is poised to address a comprehensive range of national security priorities, from diplomacy and homeland security to military operations.

“Macro Solutions’ unrestricted work and mature AI-driven code modernization is already well-known within the Tradewinds marketplace and the DoD,” said Gautam Ijoor, CEO of Alpha Omega.

“Combining expertise and digital transformation in Workday and Oracle Cloud for ERP and human capital management Alpha Omega will increase delivery of more impactful and robust solutions across Defense, Financial Regulatory, and broader government sectors.”  

“We are excited to become a part of Alpha Omega,” said Amy Wright, CEO of Macro Solutions. “Collectively, this merger will enable us to scale every aspect of our business and fulfill our role as an innovation partner for our federal agency partners.”

The acquisition of SeKON, LLC establishes a new Health domain vertical within Alpha Omega, creating opportunities to improve health outcomes for both military personnel and the general public. SeKON’s proven track record with agencies such as DHA, CDC, NIH, and SAMHSA add substantial value to Alpha Omega’s offerings and ability to field more complex contracts. 

“Integrating SeKON’s Health domain expertise and capabilities represents a key market expansion for Alpha Omega,” said Gautam Ijoor. “SeKON is a vital addition as we continue to make our IT solutions readily accessible by way of our growing portfolio of unrestricted contract vehicles, including CIOSP4 unrestricted and Alliant 3.” 

“This collaboration with Alpha Omega allows us to drive meaningful improvements in health outcomes while delivering state-of-the-art solutions to our federal clients,” said Dr. Angela Wilson, CEO of SeKON.

These acquisitions highlight Alpha Omega’s commitment to growth, innovation, and providing impactful solutions for federal agencies. Alpha Omega thanks Greg Nossaman of G Squared Capital Partners, Todd Taskey of Potomac Business Capital for their expert guidance, Morrison & Foerster for legal support, and BDO and Grant Thornton for financial and tax expertise throughout the merger and acquisition process.