PSPC is the largest single federal procurement authority. Vendors holding ProServices, TBIPS, TSPS, SBIPS, real-property vehicles, or category-specific supply arrangements need their corporate website tuned to PSPC evaluator expectations.
PSPC evaluators run the same 90-second corporate-site check on every shortlisted bidder. The pattern is consistent: home page (looking for federal-vendor seriousness), team page (looking for named senior personnel and clearance signaling where disclosable), capability statement (looking for PSPC-aligned NAICS coverage and past-performance evidence), and accessibility (looking for WCAG conformance and bilingual posture).
The sites that score well don't look like SaaS startups. They look like serious B2G consultancies — clean, content-dense, no marketing fluff, no demo CTA, no startup-style pricing tier card.
**ProServices** — emphasize task-based professional-services experience, named-resource depth, and the categories your standing offer covers.
**TBIPS / TSPS** — IT-services positioning, with category-by-category capability evidence and NCR resource availability.
**SBIPS** — solutions-based positioning, with prior solution-build references and integration-partner relationships.
**Real Property** — real-property-specific past performance, professional-engineering capability, and PSPC Real Property and Receiver General experience.
**Category-specific SAs** — single-category specialty page that names the SA, the categories, the period of standing, and your active task authorizations.
Yes, with the SO/SA reference number and the active period. Procurement officers Google these regularly.
Project name + PSPC-format reference (department, file number where disclosable, value range, period, scope). Generic 'we worked with PSPC' isn't credible.