Brian P. Gallagher is director of ISR Mission Systems Engineering within the ISR Systems Division, Mission Systems Sector, Northrop Grumman. He was previously director of the Software Engineering Institute (SEI) Acquisition Program.
Mike Phillips is program manager for CMMI at the SEI. In that position he leads the CMMI Product Suite evolution for the SEI. He was a senior acquisition professional in the military before joining the SEI.
Dr. Karen J. Richter is a research analyst and senior project leader at the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA), a research and development “think tank” for the Department of Defense. She has served on the CMMI Configuration Control Board and the CMMI Steering Group.
Sandy Shrum is a senior writer/editor at the SEI. She has been with the SEI since 1995 and has been a member of the CMMI Development Team since the CMMI project’s inception in 1998.
Foreword: A Commercial Perspective | p. xi |
Foreword: A Government Perspective | p. xv |
Preface | p. xvii |
Acknowledgments | p. xxv? |
About CMMI for Acquisition | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 3 |
About Capability Maturity Models | p. 5 |
Evolution of CMMI | p. 7 |
CMMI Framework Architecture | p. 8 |
CMMI for Acquisition | p. 9 |
Process Area Components | p. 11 |
Required, Expected, and Informative Components | p. 11 |
Components Associated with Part Two | p. 13 |
Supporting Informative Components | p. 17 |
Numbering Scheme | p. 19 |
Typographical Conventions | p. 19 |
Tying | |
It All Together | p. 23 |
Understanding Levels | p. 23 |
Structures of the Continuous and Staged Representations | p. 25 |
Understanding Capability Levels | p. 27 |
Understanding Maturity Levels | p. 30 |
Process Areas | p. 35 |
Equivalent Staging | p. 38 |
Relationships among Process Areas | p. 43 |
Project Processes | p. 44 |
Organizational Processes | p. 49 |
Support Processes | p. 50 |
High Maturity Processes | p. 52 |
Using CMMI Models | p. 55 |
Adopting CMMI | p. 55 |
Your Process Improvement Program | p. 56 |
Selections That Influence Your Program | p. 56 |
CMMI Models | p. 57 |
Using CMMI Appraisals | p. 58 |
Appraisal Requirements for CMMI | p. 58 |
SCAMPI Appraisal Methods | p. 59 |
Appraisal Considerations | p. 59 |
CMMI-Related Training | p. 61 |
Using CMMI-ACQ in Government | p. 63 |
Critical Issues in Government Acquisition | p. 63 |
Acquisition Strategy: Planning for Success | p. 70 |
Agreements: They Are Not Just with Suppliers | p. 75 |
Acquisition Verification: The Challenges | p. 77 |
Interoperable Acquisition | p. 81 |
Transition to Operations: Delivering Value | p. 84 |
CMMI: The Heart of the U.S. Air Force's Systems Engineering Assessment Model | p. 86 |
Acquisition Improvement: Identifying and Removing Process Constraints | p. 90 |
Using CMMI-ACQ in Industry: General Motors Case Study | p. 97 |
Executive Summary | p. 97 |
Overview of General Motors | p. 100 |
Overview of GM Information Systems & Services (IS&S) | p. 101 |
IS&S Factory Structure | p. 104 |
System Delivery Factory: An Acquisition Organization | p. 105 |
Governance of the System Development Factory | p. 107 |
Aligning the GM System Delivery Process to CMMI-ACQ | p. 108 |
Realizing Value from the CMMI-ACQ at GM | p. 113 |
GM to CMMI-ACQ Practice Mapping | p. 129 |
Managing Process Deployment and Change | p. 129 |
Integrated Tools E | |
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