Federal News
U.S. Army Establishes Innovation Pathway Office
March 17, 2026
The U.S. Army has launched the Pathway for Innovation and Technology (PIT) Office to accelerate the transition of emerging technologies directly into operational units. This initiative integrates innovation organizations, acquisition leaders, and industry partners to rapidly deliver scalable capabilities based on Soldier feedback and operational needs. The PIT Office emphasizes a streamlined process that allows companies to leave equipment with Soldiers for extended assessment periods, enabling senior commanders to make informed decisions on scaling technologies across formations.
- The PIT Office represents a shift toward faster, risk-tolerant acquisition processes that prioritize operational relevance and scalability.
- Procurement professionals should note the increased opportunity for industry to engage early and demonstrate technologies with direct Soldier involvement.
- This approach may reduce traditional bureaucratic delays, encouraging vendors to invest in rapid prototyping and iterative feedback.
- Organizations should prepare to support extended field assessments and be ready for potential rapid scaling decisions by Army leadership.
What weโve had is unitโdriven innovation, weโve had labโdriven innovation with PMs and PAEs, but in this case, the gloves are off and we can inject that capability. By having a broader scope, now you donโt have to go back and ask for change that much.
— Col. Shermoan Daiyaan, Director of the PIT
Holistically, the objective is to curate innovation from across the entire ecosystem. Weโre willing to take more risk up front, invest in a spectrum of different companies. Scale what works and divest what isnโt working.
— Matt Willis, Ph.D., Director of Army FUZE
From a process standpoint, once these demonstrations are over, whatโs really key is the companies are leaving the equipment behind. And leaving them behind in the hands of Soldiers gives us about 45 days of additional assessment before those fourโstar commanders say, hey, this equipment is what I want to scale, and this is scale with a smallest across the formation.
— Col. Chris Hill, Director of G-TEAD
Agencies
U.S. Army Acquisition Support Center, Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics and Technology, Army FUZE, Joint Innovation Outpost, Global Tactical Edge Acquisition Directorate