In GovCon, forecasting is not just about planning revenue. It is about building a defensible Basis of Estimate, supporting pricing decisions with real internal cost structure, and maintaining traceability from forecast through execution. SERVVIAN® brings that discipline together through FALIB® and BreakEven PLUS™.
FALIB® — Forecast Analysis Labor-Intensive Business — is more than a report. It is a connected reporting system inside SERVVIAN® BreakEven PLUS™ that links forecasts, estimates, and job reporting through UUID-based traceability.
Instead of treating estimating, forecasting, and execution reporting as separate files or disconnected spreadsheets, the FALIB® stack creates a structured data chain that supports financial visibility, pricing discipline, and stronger GovCon decision-making.
FALIB®-Mr is the master-level forecasting report, compiling detailed labor, burden, fringe, overhead, general and administrative, cost of goods sold calculations, and employee classes.
It is the full dataset used for strategic pricing, indirect rate development, and internal forecasting. It serves as the foundation for all FALIB®-derived outputs and feeds into FALIB®-Jr.
FALIB®-Sr is a universal forecast view that allows grouping of direct labor and indirect labor while still providing G&A rates for Single-Element, Total Cost Input, and Value-Added bases.
Davis-Bacon or prevailing-wage shortfalls and ripple impacts are specifically achieved with FALIB®-Mr, giving the master model deeper labor-structure visibility where it matters most.
Each job and report instance in BreakEven PLUS™ is assigned a UUID — a Universal Unique Identifier — that follows it from start to finish.
FALIB®-Mr or FALIB®-Sr begins the lifecycle with structured internal cost and forecast logic.
BreakEven PLUS™ carries that logic into the estimation stack, preserving continuity between forecast and pricing.
FALIB®-Jr extends that lifecycle into execution-oriented reporting for stronger traceability and review.
Below is an example of the type of forecasting visibility organizations can gain using the FALIB®-Mr structure inside SERVVIAN®.
The projected profit figure above links directly into the broader FALIB® context for organizations that want a deeper understanding of profit modeling and forecast structure.
In government contracting, the Basis of Estimate is not just a formality. It is a compliance-sensitive artifact. BreakEven PLUS™ and the FALIB® reporting stack support the backbone of that BOE by using actual internal cost accounting logic, not generic benchmarks or industry averages.
Whether you are building a rate sheet, bidding on a federal project, or validating job costs after delivery, the FALIB® reporting stack gives you connected estimating logic rather than isolated reporting outputs.
FALIB®-Mr provides the deep forecasting structure needed for strategic cost, labor, and indirect-rate analysis.
FALIB®-Sr provides a more universal forecast view for structured pricing support and summary-level decision-making.
FALIB®-Jr supports lifecycle continuity by linking forecast logic to job-level execution visibility.
All connected. All traceable. All structured to support better estimating discipline and stronger internal control.
Let SERVVIAN® show you how FALIB® can turn your internal cost data into a more powerful, audit-ready estimating engine, whether you are pre-bid, building a forecast, or reviewing post-performance results.
The value is not just better reporting. It is better estimating, better traceability, and better financial visibility across the full job lifecycle.
FALIB® reports are based on forecasted labor, operational costs, pass-through components, and other cost estimates entered by the end-user, and should not be interpreted as incurred cost actuals. Profit visibility and profit predictability in FALIB® refer to modeled forecast outcomes — not realized or audited financial results. Profit outputs in FALIB® represent projected conditions derived from user-provided inputs and do not constitute evidence of actual earnings, final contract performance, or accounting actuals.