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FDACS Seeks Publisher for “Fresh From Florida” Magazine: A Zero-Cost Contract Funded Entirely by Advertising

The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services has released RFP DM 25 26 44 seeking a qualified firm to publish and distribute the “Fresh From Florida” magazine. But here’s what makes this procurement unusual: the Department won’t pay a dime. The selected vendor must fund the entire operation through advertising sales.

The Business Model

This isn’t a typical government contract where you invoice for services rendered. The vendor assumes all production costs—design, photography, content creation, printing, and distribution—and recoups those costs (plus profit) exclusively through advertising revenue. The Department gets a high-quality magazine promoting Florida agriculture at no cost, and the vendor gets exclusive access to sell advertising in an official state publication.

It’s a risk-reward equation. If you can sell the ads, you make money. If you can’t, you’re still contractually obligated to deliver 18,000 copies of a 60-page magazine.

What FDACS Wants

The “Fresh From Florida” magazine has been published since 1998, targeting individuals and businesses connected to Florida’s agricultural community. The Department wants a turnkey operation—in-house staff capable of handling everything from editorial content to distribution. Key specifications include:

  • Minimum 18,000 copies (with options to scale to 50,000)
  • At least 60 pages, approximately 8″ x 10.5″
  • Perfect bound, 4/4 ink cover, 70# text interior, 100# cover
  • Print and digital versions
  • Annual delivery by January 15

The Department retains complete ownership and copyright of all content, approves all advertisements, and controls design and layout decisions. The vendor handles execution, but FDACS maintains editorial authority.

The Advertising Framework

Vendors must establish their own advertising rate schedules, but the contract includes specific requirements:

  • FAPC (Florida Agricultural Promotional Campaign) members receive at least a 10% discount
  • The Department can reject any advertisement based on form or content
  • Monthly progress reports on sales efforts are required
  • Full accounting within 90 days of publication delivery
  • Advertiser copies don’t count toward the Department’s 18,000 minimum

Uncollectable advertising accounts are entirely the vendor’s problem. If an advertiser doesn’t pay, you still delivered the magazine.

Evaluation Criteria

Here’s how FDACS will score proposals:

CriteriaPoints
Project Management Plan50
Statement of Qualifications30
Past Performance / References30
Total110

Project management carries the most weight—nearly half the available points. Your proposed scope of work, timeline, topic suggestions, distribution plan, and responsibility matrix matter more than anything else. The Department wants to see that you understand the workflow and can execute reliably.

References are verified directly by FDACS, and they’re asking pointed questions: Did the firm complete projects on time? How’s the quality of written content? Layout and photography? Would you use them again? A “no” on whether you’ve actually produced a high-quality magazine for the reference disqualifies your entire proposal.

Who Should Pursue This

This RFP targets established magazine publishers with proven advertising sales capabilities. The qualification requirements are specific:

  • Experience producing public-interest magazines with 18,000+ distribution
  • Three detailed examples of similar turnkey magazine projects
  • Three hardcopy samples of previous work
  • In-house staff for design, content, photography, and sales

If you’re primarily a printer, a marketing agency without publishing experience, or a startup without a track record, this isn’t your opportunity. FDACS may conduct an onsite demonstration at your facility before contract execution to verify you’re fully operational.

Timeline

EventDate
Questions DueJanuary 29, 2026 at 5:00 PM
Answers PostedFebruary 3, 2026
Proposals DueFebruary 12, 2026 at 5:00 PM
Public OpeningFebruary 13, 2026 at 9:00 AM
Evaluation PeriodFebruary 16-20, 2026
Intent to AwardMarch 3, 2026

Submission Requirements

This is a physical submission—no email proposals accepted. You’ll need:

  • Volume I: One hardcopy original plus USB drive (administrative forms)
  • Volume II: Five hardcopy originals plus USB drive (technical response with three physical magazine samples)
  • Volume III: Redacted copy on USB if claiming confidential information

Deliver everything to the Mayo Building in Tallahassee by February 12 at 5:00 PM. Late submissions won’t be considered regardless of postmark.

Contract Terms

The initial term is three years with a potential three-year renewal—up to six years for the right partner. The draft contract is straightforward, and the Department isn’t inviting negotiation on terms. By submitting a proposal, you’re agreeing to the contract as written.

The Bottom Line

This is a niche opportunity for publishers who already know how to monetize agricultural or public-interest magazines through advertising. The zero-cost-to-government model means your profit depends entirely on your sales team’s ability to fill ad pages at rates that cover your production costs.

If you have the publishing infrastructure, the advertising relationships, and the appetite for a revenue-based contract, this could be a solid six-year engagement with a state agency. If you’re hoping to learn magazine publishing on the Department’s project, look elsewhere.

Questions are due January 29.


Need strategic guidance on Florida procurement opportunities? Contact Gellis Law, PLLC for sophisticated counsel on government contracting.

Sean Gellis

Sean Gellis maintains FloridaProcurements.com and leads Gellis Law, PLLC, providing expert insight into Florida government contracting with particular focus on transportation and technology opportunities. As former Chief of Staff of the Department of Management Services (DMS), General Counsel of the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), and Deputy General Counsel of the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR), he brings unparalleled insider perspective to government procurement matters.

Board Certified in State and Federal Government and Administrative Practice by The Florida Bar—a distinction held by fewer than 75 Florida attorneys—he combines sophisticated legal experience with practical agency knowledge. Through FloridaProcurements.com, he regularly analyzes procurement trends and strategic opportunities in Florida's government marketplace. His Procurement Insider subscription service offers companies confidential intelligence and strategic guidance on Florida technology procurements, transforming how innovative providers compete for government business. Sean's unique background enables him to bridge the gap between government processes and private sector innovation, helping clients navigate procurement challenges and capitalize on opportunities that others miss.

http://www.gellislaw.com

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