Engility nearly doubled its revenue over the last 18 months through acquisitions, with an eye toward building the critical mass it needs to be competitive in today's market.
L-3 Communications has been weathering the defense downturn by divesting and investing to put the company in the best position to win new work as when the market turns.
As CSC moves toward splitting into two companies -- public sector and commercial -- the government business stays focused on opportunities around the cloud, infrastructure and modernization.
Raytheon Co. has reorganized and streamlined to be more efficient at the same it has broadened its technology offerings in areas such as missile defense and cybersecurity.
General Dynamics, the No. 5 company on the 2014 Top 100, put a major emphasis on restructuring of its IT operations in the past year and is now looking at refinements as it hunts for new opportunities.
Executives explain how they managed people and results -- they captured a top five spot on the Top 100 -- all the while planning for a split that would create two multi-billion dollar companies.
Raytheon's recent consolidation of business lines steamlined company operations and preserved it ability to chase domestic and international opportunities.
The Army has awarded the low-rate initial production of its next-generation tactical communications network to General Dynamics Corp. under a contract with a ceiling of $2.8 billion.
The Army has selected Boeing Co. to build an airborne intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance data collection system to support battlefield missions under a contract worth $88.1 million.
Science Applications International Corp. will furnish technical and engineering support to the Navy office that manages unmanned aircraft systems that conduct maritime surveillance under a task order potentially worth $39 million over five years
The Navy will issue up to five requests for proposals over the next 12 months as it begins the transition from the massive Navy-Marine Corps Intranet to the successor program.
The U.S. Special Operations Command has awarded a five-year, $170 million contract to a unit of L-3 Communications for portable satellite communications systems that will give special operations forces high-speed transmission capacity for voice and data communications.
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