Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMyles Pope Modified over 8 years ago
1
Requirements Executive Overview Workshop Requirements Management Certification Training
2
Tab 1 - Introduction General/Flag Officers and Senior Executive Service personnel who successfully complete this course will: –Recognize requirements management within the context of a “Big A” acquisition construct and the related processes –Analyze how today’s requirements and capabilities for the warfighter are conceived, developed, tested, and acquired –Relate the roles of stakeholders responsible for clarification, approval, and advocacy for the warfighter 2 RQM 403 Outcomes
3
Tab 1 - Introduction Section 801 of FY 2007 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) –Establish a certification program for DoD personnel responsible for generating requirements for major defense acquisition programs (MDAPs) –Certify by September 30, 2008 –The certification program should address: Interrelationship between requirements, PPBE, and acquisition; Developing joint operations requirements; Early baselining of program requirements and “the adverse effect” of changing or adding requirements; and Importance of technology maturity and alternatives 3 Why Train and Certify Requirements Managers?
4
Tab 1 - Introduction4 Requirements Management – Certification Training Levels Framework Required Training Level Guidelines CLR 101 Introduction to JCIDS RQM 110 Core Concepts for Requirements Management RQM 310 Advanced Concepts and Skills RQM 403 Requirements Executive Overview Workshop RQM 413 Senior Leader Requirements Course 4 – 6 hours18 – 24 hours1 Week1 DayTailored A, B, CB, CCD (1-3 Star / SES)D (4-Star / Agency Head) A Requirements Originators and Support – Contribute to Requirements generation and capability development in various capacities to include: Stating users’ needs, analysis, subject matter or domain expertise, document staffing and coordination, administrative support B Requirements Writers and Developers – Write requirements and requirements documents; Fill specific capacities to include: Lead study elements, adjudicate comments, facilitate document development and coordination across organizations C Requirements Core Expertise – Support the creation, staffing, or validation of requirements documents; Train others on “Big A” acquisition topics; Represent Services, Agencies, or CCMDs in requirements, acquisition, or resourcing forums; Support presentations at FCBs or at Service-level Requirements Councils D Requirements Validators and Prioritizors at the GO/FO/SES level – Validate and approve documents; Provide senior leadership and oversight of JCIDS analysis and staffing; Enforce requirements standards and accountability
5
Tab 1 - Introduction5 Level C Certification Level C Certification Level B Certification Level B Certification Level A Certification Level A Certification Level D Executive Certification Level D Executive Certification RQM 413 Senior Leader Requirements Course 4-star GO/FO, Agency Head RQM 413 Senior Leader Requirements Course 4-star GO/FO, Agency Head 18 - 24 hours online 1-week classroom 1-day Classroom Requirements originators and support CLR 101 Introduction to JCIDS CLR 101 Introduction to JCIDS RQM 310 Advanced Concepts and Skills for Requirements Management RQM 310 Advanced Concepts and Skills for Requirements Management RQM 403 Requirements Executive Overview Workshop 1-3 star GO/FO, SES RQM 403 Requirements Executive Overview Workshop 1-3 star GO/FO, SES Tailored Desktop Discussion RQM 110 Core Concepts for Requirements Management RQM 110 Core Concepts for Requirements Management 4 - 6 hours online Core Plus Courses (online) Core Plus Courses (online) CLR 151 Analysis of Alternatives CLR 250 Capability- Based Assessments CLR 252 Developing Performance Attributes Requirements writers and developers Requirements presenters and trainers Make decisions Set priorities Approve & Validate JCIDS Documents Requirements Management Training— Course and Curriculum Overview Core Courses – Mandatory for RM Certification Core Plus Courses (aka “Just-In-Time”) -- Not Required for Certification Unless Directed by Component Unlike the Defense Acquisition Workforce, the Requirements Management Certification Level A, B, C Construct is Rank/Grade Agnostic
6
Tab 1 - Introduction Full Rate Prod Decision Review Joint Concepts Capabilities - Based Assessment MS CMS B President SECDEF CJCS COCOMs FCB Strategic Guidance Incremental Development MS A Engineering & Manufacturing Development Production & Deployment O&S AoA ICD User Needs CPD 6 DAU Requirements Courses CLR 151 CLR 252 KPP s CLR 101 RQM 110 RQM 310 RQM 403 & 413 CLR 250 Core + Core Technology Maturation/Risk Reduction CDD Materiel Solution Analysis MDD
7
Tab 1 - Introduction7 Big “A” Acquisition Small “a” Acquisition Big “A” Acquisition Resources (PPBE) Defense Acquisition System (DAS) Requirements (JCIDS) Strive for the overlap! Get JCIDS, DAS, and PPBE to work together Funding instability Insufficient resource trade space Budget not properly phased or of insufficient magnitude to support planned development Immature technologies Inadequate systems engineering Inadequate requirements flow-down, traceability, or decomposition Insufficient schedule trade space Inadequate implementation of Earned Value Management System Lack of time and assets for testing Lack of JROC-validated requirements documents for basic program (ICD, CDD, CPD) Inadequate requirements for basic program and any increments Requirements “creep” Critical dependence on external programs with developmental issues Inter- and intra-departmental stakeholder coordination and support
8
Tab 1 - Introduction8 Perception is Reality Resources (PPBE) Defense Acquisition System Requirements Little Overlap Limited Communications Poor Agreement
9
Tab 1 - Introduction Requirements Manager: A military Service member or DoD civilian charged with assessing, developing, validating, and prioritizing requirements and associated requirements products through the Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS) Requirements Managers act for the warfighters –To the requirements generation process (JCIDS) –To the "Big A" acquisition community Establish and maintain communications –DoD includes many different points of view –Every manager and decision maker needs a common understanding of what the warfighters need The Requirements Manager must advocate effective solutions while avoiding “Requirements Creep” 9 Definition and Roles of the Requirements Manager Work with JCIDS, DAS, and PPBE to deliver capabilities to the Warfighter
10
Tab 1 - Introduction Analysis: Determine requirements –Identify what the warfighter needs to do –Requirements and not “Desirements” Document: Communicate requirements –Develop JCIDS documents –Staff and validate those documents Prioritize Oversee the DAS and PPBE capability delivery –Reinforce process discipline –Avoid “Requirements Creep” 10 What Does an RM Do?
11
Tab 1 - Introduction The purpose of all DAU training is to improve acquisition outcomes How do RMs improve acquisition outcomes? –Analyze –Document –Staff and validate –Prioritize –Coordinate with the DAS and with PPBE What certifications / qualifications do RMs need? *How can DAU help the decision makers? –What does DAU need to do to make today worthwhile? –What follow-up assistance will help? *How can DAU help the people who work for you? 11 Recurring Questions * Further discussion during RQM 403 Wrap-Up
12
Tab 1 - Introduction12 Today Resources (PPBE) Defense Acquisition System (DAS) Requirements (JCIDS) Tab 2Tabs 3 and 4 Tab 5 Tab 6
13
Tab 1 - Introduction13 0800 – 0815Welcome & Introductions / DAU Overview (Tab 0)Maryann Watson 0815 – 0845Requirements Management Training & Certification (Tab 1)Dr. Chuck Court 0845 – 1000Joint Capabilities Integration Development System (JCIDS) (Tab 2)John DeRosa 1000 – 1015BREAK 1015 – 1100Acquisition Policy and Oversight (Tab 3)Mike Holbert 1100 – 1200Defense Acquisition Management System (Tab 4)Mike Holbert 1200 – 1215BREAK / WORKING LUNCH 1215 – 1345Planning, Programming, Budgeting, and Execution (PPBE) (Tab 5)Roberta Tomasini 1345 – 1400BREAK Major Interactions (Tab 6) 1400 – 1430Science and TechnologyDr Chuck Court 1430 – 1500Systems EngineeringMike Holbert 1500 – 1530Test and EvaluationMike Bohn 1530 – 1600LogisticsJohn Mueller 1600 – 1630Wrap up / RQM 403 Survey (Tab 7)Dr. Chuck Court RQM 403 Agenda 16 March 2016/ Building 226 Conference Room 15
15
Tab 1 - Introduction15 Backup Slides
16
Tab 1 - Introduction 1.If we ask for the wrong thing, We will get the wrong thing 2.If we present our needs poorly, We will get the wrong thing 3.If we don’t follow up to be sure we get what we need from the DAS and from PPBE, We will get the wrong thing All systems use development, procurement, and sustainment funds All systems use training time, personnel costs, test facilities, operations, and maintenance 16 Simple Facts Get it right the first time! We do not have time or money to waste
17
Tab 1 - Introduction Our readiness is only as good as the clarity of our documented requirements If the requirement dies, the capability dies! –If the Requirement doesn’t roll, the capability doesn’t roll –If the Requirement sinks, the capability sinks –If the Requirement stalls, crashes, and burns; the capability stalls, crashes, and burns –If the Requirement loses the beachhead, the capability loses the war! 17 The Requirements Manager is Integral to a GREAT Program The Requirements Manager Is the Voice of the Warfighter!
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.