Compendium of Resources for Capabilities-Based Planning

Compendium of Resources for Capabilities-Based Planning

Over the years, the success rate of traditional project management methods applied to software development projects has been underwhelming. Capabilities–Based planning provides a defined outcome that is not a conclusion but lays the groundwork for continued value delivery. Objectives are reached, and the operational value is delivered when a defined capability is available.?

Features and functions describe a system's static and dynamic behaviors but are not directly connected to the business strategy. Milestones indicate that a position in a timeline has been reached but do not forecast what value will be delivered to the business or how this value is traceable to the user community's needs.

“Capabilities-Based Planning… involves a functional analysis of operational requirements. Capabilities are identified based on the tasks required… Once the required capability inventory is defined, the most cost-effective and efficient options to satisfy the requirements are sought.”

Capabilities–Based planning:

  • Transforms the delivery of features and functions into the delivery of processes and technologies that support the business strategy.
  • It is?planning, under the conditions of uncertainty, to provide capabilities suitable for a wide range of business challenges and circumstances while working within an economic framework.

What Are Capabilities and Why Are They Better at Describing Maturity?

Measuring project and product maturity as a function of effort and time assures project management adds value to the business. Simply controlling and measuring the expenditure of resources – scorekeeping – provides little value in the presence of change.

Capabilities–based planning provides a defined outcome that is not a conclusion but lays the groundwork for continued value delivery. Objectives are reached, and the operational value is delivered when a defined capability is available.?Features and functions describe a system's static and dynamic behaviors but are not directly connected to the business strategy. Milestones indicate that a position in a timeline has been reached but do not forecast what value will be delivered to the business or how this value is traceable to the user community's needs. Capabilities answer the following question:

To?achieve our objectives, what capabilities must we possess?

Capabilities–based planning transforms the delivery of features and functions into the delivery of processes and technologies that support the business strategy. Capabilities–based planning is planning, under the conditions of uncertainty, to provide capabilities suitable for a wide range of business challenges and circumstances while working within an economic framework. This approach emphasizes flexibility, adaptiveness, and robust capabilities, implying a modular building–block approach to delivering enterprise applications.

Capabilities are not the same as features and functions; they enable demands to be met without the explicit specification of the solution. A capability is the ability to affect an outcome, react to an input, or change an effect. Capabilities –Based Planning describes what?Done?looks like in units of measure meaningful to the decision-makers. These measures include:

  • Measures of Effectiveness (MOE) - Operational measures of success closely related to the achievements of the mission or operational objectives evaluated in the operational environment under a specific set of conditions.
  • Measures of Performance (MOP) - Measures that characterize physical or functional attributes relating to the system operation, measured or estimated under specific conditions.
  • Technical Performance Measures (TPM) - Attributes that determine how well a system or system element is satisfying or expected to satisfy a technical requirement or goal.
  • Key System Attributes (KSA) - a system capability considered crucial to achieving a balanced solution/approach to a Key Performance Parameter (KPP) or some other key performance attribute deemed necessary by the sponsor.
  • Key Performance Parameters (KPP) - key system capabilities must be met to deliver its operational goals.

A capability provides an outcome or an effect without an?a priori?specification. Features and functions require an a priori specification to test for their existence or conformance to the specification. Capabilities–based planning can be understood at the execution level, but it needs to be raised to the level of enterprise process analysis:

Identify a needed capability in operational terms, using the set of capability options to assess the effectiveness in an operational paradigm, and make choices about requirements and the ways to achieve the capability using an integrated portfolio framework to produce an output set of options based on these operational paradigms.

Capabilities-Based Planning addresses information, risks, and strategies to increase the probability of project success: ?

  • Mission or Business Strategy - The purpose(s) (objectives and end state).
  • Conditions - The values of operational environment variables, including scenarios that affect task performance.
  • Effect - A change in a condition, behavior, or degree of freedom.
  • Capability: The ability to achieve the desired effect under specified standards and conditions through various means and ways to perform a set of tasks.
  • Task - An action or activity (derived from an analysis of a mission, business strategy, and concept of operations (CONOPS) assigned to an individual or organization to provide a capability.
  • CONOPS - The overall picture and broad flow of tasks assigned to subordinates/supporting entities within a plan by which a stakeholder maps capabilities to effects to accomplish a mission or business strategy in a specific scenario.
  • Scenarios - Assumptions about an operation's business or technical context, including competitors, partners, and suppliers.
  • End State - A set of conditions, behaviors, and degrees of freedom that defines the achievement of the stakeholder mission or business strategy.
  • Standards: Quantitative or qualitative measures that gauge a task's performance levels.?

Blog Posts on Capabilities-Based Planning

  • Capabilities-Based Planning - A Primer, OnLine PM Course.
  • Capabilities-Based Planning First, Then Requirements?- do not start with Requirements. Start with?what capabilities we need to possess for success.
  • Capabilities-Based Planning?- Capabilities Based Planning is a method involving the functional analysis of operational requirements.?
  • Capabilities-Based Planning?-?Capabilities-Based Planning focuses on producing Enterprise and Software Intensive Systems focused on strategic outcomes. Progress is measured by assessing the effectiveness and performance of the deliverables in meeting those strategic objectives. This approach assures business value is connected with the strategy, not just measures of the passage of time and consumption of money and the production of technical features.?
  • The Basis of Capabilities-Based Planning?-?The notion of Capabilities-Based Planning is grounded in military planning and the acquisition of weapon systems. This approach is well suited for developing or acquiring any complex system. It is also a near-perfect match for the Agile Development or Project Management paradigm.
  • Capabilities-Based Planning in Agile Development?-?Many approaches to ERP focus on "requirements" which are not connected to the business strategy. A balanced scorecard connects project and business indicators of success starting here.
  • Capabilities-Based Planning is the Foundation of All Project Success?- What Capabilities does the project need to produce to accomplish the Mission or Fulfill the business strategy for those paying for the work? Without knowing that, along with the Measures of Effectiveness and Measures of Performance, the probability of project success is low.
  • Eliciting Capabilities?- All project success starts with knowing what done looks like in units of measure meaningful to the decision-makers. These units begin with effectiveness and performance. These capabilities are the foundation of defining the technical and operational requirements of the product or service produced by the project. Without the defined capabilities, those requirements have no reason for being.
  • Capabilities-Based Planning?- The success rate of traditional project management methods applied to software development projects has been underwhelming over the years.

Resources for Capabilities-Based Planning

? Abstracted from "MORS Workshop Capabilities Based Planning, The Road Ahead, 19-21 October 2004,?Institute for Defense Analyses, Arlington Virginia, James Bexfield and Lisa Disbrow Chaors

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