A fixed-fee first look at ammunition, explosives, AQAP, STANAG, NSPA or NATO-facing procurement risk, before you commit to a bid, a supplier, or a programme decision. One clear read, one recommended next step.
Most procurement mistakes in this field are not price mistakes. They are certification-chain and competence mistakes that surface too late. A triage review gives you a fast, independent view while you can still act on it.
Companies selling ammunition, energetics, weapons, demilitarisation, storage, packaging, QA or safety services into NATO and European procurement.
Teams weighing a bid or no-bid decision, or choosing between suppliers, who want an independent risk read before they proceed.
Primes, agencies and investors assessing an ammunition or energetics supplier, a capability claim, or a target before due diligence.
Importers and programme teams who need a fast, defensible view on certification, safety and traceability questions.
The triage is deliberately bounded. It tells you where the obvious risk sits and what to do next. It is not a full audit, and it is not legal or export-control advice.
ISC is independent. We are not a broker, agent or reseller, and we hold no supplier commissions. A triage may conclude that the safest commercial answer is not to bid. That independence is the point.
A 15-minute call to confirm the review fits your question. No fee is taken until we both agree it does.
The fee is £450 + VAT (€500), paid before document review. An NDA is available on request before you share anything.
Within three working days: a 2 to 4 page initial risk note, or a 30 to 45 minute advisory call. Your choice.
If you commission a larger package within 30 days, the triage fee is credited in full against it.
Tell us what you need looked at. We reply within one working day, usually with a short suitability call to confirm fit before any fee is taken.
Send the question anyway. If a 15-minute call will answer it, we will tell you that, and you will not be charged for a review you do not need.
Send your question