Multiple Award Task Order Contract
An indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity vehicle under which the government awards contracts to two or more companies who then compete against each other for individual task orders as work is identified. MATOCs are common in DoD construction and services procurements and require contractors to win at the task-order level, not just at the base award.
Related terms
Administrative Contracting Officer
ACOAn Administrative Contracting Officer manages a contract after award, handling modifications, cost and schedule oversight, and day-to-day compliance monitoring, while a separate procuring contracting officer typically handles the award itself. An ACO's authority is defined by a written letter of delegation and is limited to the specific functions it grants.
Communications Security
COMSECCommunications Security covers the measures, equipment, and procedures used to protect government voice, data, and message traffic from interception, exploitation, or unauthorized disclosure, including encryption, key management, and transmission security. Contractors working with classified or sensitive communications equipment must follow NSA/CNSS COMSEC policy, often including trained custodians and controlled key material.
Contracting Officer
KOThe Contracting Officer is the government official with legal authority to enter into, administer, modify, or terminate a contract on the agency's behalf. Only the KO can bind the government to contractual commitments; direction from any other government employee, including a program manager or COR, does not carry that authority.
Contracting Officer's Representative
CORA Contracting Officer's Representative is appointed in writing by the KO to monitor day-to-day contract performance, inspect deliverables, and serve as the technical point of contact with the contractor. A COR has no authority to change price, scope, or terms; performance concerns get escalated back to the Contracting Officer for a binding decision.
Controlled Unclassified Information
CUIControlled Unclassified Information is unclassified government information that still requires safeguarding or dissemination controls under law, regulation, or agency policy, such as procurement-sensitive data, export-controlled technical data, or personally identifiable information. Contractors handling CUI must follow specific marking, storage, and access rules, and it is a core driver behind CMMC requirements.
