The three-month FedRAMP approach

The FedRAMP team is bullish on getting cloud service providers through the approval process in a single quarter, thanks to its new pre-assessment phase.

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After an overhaul, the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program expects to offer cloud service providers a dramatically shorter time frame for reviews.

"We're hoping it's going to take three months," FedRAMP Director Matt Goodrich said at Amazon Web Services' Public Sector Summit on June 20. "My team kind of hates me because sometimes I make crazy goals for us, but I actually really think it's possible."

The focus on speed would be a welcome improvement on the current state of affairs. Goodrich has acknowledged that the process currently takes most CSPs nine to 18 months to complete, while some parties in the private sector peg the timeline at closer to two years.

The faster turnaround will be thanks to capabilities assessments built into FedRAMP Accelerated, a push Goodrich announced in March. He told FCW that CSPs would need to complete capabilities assessments first -- which should take less than a month -- and then move through a three-month FedRAMP authorization process.

The FedRAMP office has been testing the accelerated approach with a few CSPs, and Goodrich said a recent meeting with a Microsoft team drove home the value of FedRAMP Accelerated's prep work.

In the traditional model, a first meeting between FedRAMP's assessors and a CSP would take 90 minutes and discuss only broad, high-level points of the system under review, Goodrich said. But the latest meeting with Microsoft officials to discuss the company's Customer Relationship Management product lasted two days and featured deep dives into system details.

FedRAMP's Joint Authorization Board members -- the Defense Department, Department of Homeland Security and General Services Administration -- were particularly impressed.

"When we left, the members from the DOD, DHS and GSA teams said, 'We actually believe that two-day conversation took off at least a month of our review time because we now understand what's going on, we understand where to dig in,'" Goodrich said.

The pre-vetting process should save time for successful CSPs and reduce headaches for those destined to be unsuccessful. Goodrich said one vendor went all the way through the process only to realize near the end that its non-replaceable Britain-based jump servers made its system impossible to reconcile with FedRAMP standards.

The FedRAMP office also plans to release a final version of its long-awaited "high" baseline standards.