Difference between revisions of "Enabling Systems Engineering"

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SE activities that support an organization's needs and deliver intended value are [[Enabling (glossary)|Enabled (glossary)]] by many factors such as the organization's culture, SE workforce competencies, and how the organization grows and deploys its workforce armed with those competencies.  There are as many different ways to [[Enabling (glossary)|Enable (glossary)]] SE performance as there are organizations - every organization's approach is, in detail, unique. Nevertheless, there are many common practices, methods, and considerations that organizations use, providing a framework to structure the relevant knowledge.
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'''''Lead Authors:''''' ''Art Pyster, Hillary Sillitto, Alice Squires'', '''''Contributing Authors:''''' ''Dick Fairley, Bud Lawson, Dave Olwell, Deva Henry, Rick Adcock''
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Part 5 of the Guide to the SE Body of Knowledge (SEBoK) is a guide to knowledge about how an {{Term|Enterprise (glossary)|enterprise}} prepares and positions itself to effectively perform the {{Term|Systems Engineering (glossary)|systems engineering}} (SE) activities described elsewhere in the SEBoK.
  
Beyond individuals, there are two levels of organizational structures defined in the SEBoK: [[ Team (glossary)|Team (glossary)]] (which includes project and program teams plus other kinds of teams) and [[Business (glossary)|Business (glossary)]]/[[Enterprise (glossary)]](BE).  Teams are usually formed for a specific purpose of limited duration, such as creating a new system or upgrading an existing service or product.  Once the new system has been created and delivered or the existing service or product has been upgraded and fielded, the team responsible for that effort is usually disbanded and the individuals associated with the effort are assigned to new tasks.  For example, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration formed a team in the last decade to create a new enterprise resource planning system for its operations and dispersed the team after the system was fielded. However, there are exceptions; e.g., the U.S. Air Force's SE Center of Excellence persists indefinitely and the team stays together on successive projects. On the other hand, BEs typically have permanence.  They usually offer a [[Portfolio (glossary)|Portfolio (glossary)]] of products and services, introducing new ones, retiring old ones, and otherwise taking steps to grow the value of the business or enterprise, however value is defined.  They may offer their products and services to a single customer; for example, as a small supplier that makes a single product for sale to a large manufacturer. Sometimes, a single product or service has such value and longevity that it spawns a BE just for its creation, maintenance, and support; e.g., the Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft was developed by a consortium of three companies that formed a holding company specifically for this purpose. That holding company is expected to persist throughout the in-service life of the aircraft, providing support and upgrade services to the operators.
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SE activities — how to develop {{Term|Requirement (glossary)|requirements}}, select an appropriate {{Term|Life Cycle (glossary)|life cycle}} model, and {{Term|Architecture (glossary)|architect}} a {{Term|System of Systems (SoS) (glossary)|system of systems}}, and so on — are covered elsewhere, especially in Part 3, [[Systems Engineering and Management]]. An organization that desires to do these things effectively must work through questions like whether to allow a project manager to select the systems engineers he or she employs, and, if so, what {{Term|Competency (glossary)|competencies}} the project manager might seek in those systems engineers. These are the kinds of questions that Part 5 explores.
  
The primary structure of this Part is around BEs, teams, and individuals, with a fourth section at the beginning of the Part that articulates the overall strategy to enable SE to be performed well by a BE composed of teams and individuals.
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The discussion defines three levels of organization: {{Term|Enterprise (glossary)|enterprise}} or organization, {{Term|Team (glossary)|team}}, and individual. To adapt an example to a more complex organizational structure, simply decompose enterprises into sub-enterprises and teams into sub-teams, as needed. For more about the different types of enterprises, see [[Types of Systems]] in Part 2.
  
===Knowledge Areas in Part 5===
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[[File:SEBoK_Context_Diagram_Inner_P5_Ifezue_Obiako.png|centre|thumb|600x600px|'''Figure 1 SEBoK Part 5 in context (SEBoK Original).''' For more detail see [[Structure of the SEBoK]]]]
Part 5 contains the following knowledge areas:
 
  
*[[Systems Engineering Organizational Strategy]]
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==Knowledge Areas in Part 5==
*[[Enabling Businesses and Enterprises to Perform Systems Engineering]]
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Each part of the SEBoK is composed of knowledge areas (KA). Each KA groups topics around a theme related to the overall subject of the part.
*[[Enabling Teams to Perform Systems Engineering]]
 
*[[Enabling Individuals to Perform Systems Engineering]]
 
  
==Key Concepts and Relationships in Part 5==
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The KAs in Part 5 explore how to the performance of systems engineering from three different lenses:
Key relationships among the main concepts in this Part are illustrated in Figure 1 below.  BEs, teams, and individuals are the central concepts in the diagram:
 
  
#A BE has context, scope, and purpose; e.g., the purpose and scope of Federal Express is the delivery of letters and packages quickly and reliably, offering peace of mind to its customers.  Part of its context is that there are several other private package delivery companies with which it competes in addition to the public U.S. postal service.
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*[[Enabling Businesses and Enterprises]]
#A BE creates value for its participants, shareholders, customers, society, and other stakeholders.  The relevant stakeholders varies with the BE; e.g., Federal Express is a publicly traded company headquartered in the U.S. Its most important stakeholders include its shareholders and the millions of customers it serves daily. The presumption, of course, is that SE activities add value to the BE and that value is greater when SE activities are well aligned to the BE context, scope, and purpose and operate consistent with the BE culture.
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*[[Enabling Teams]]
#A BE assigns resources and services to teams which themselves have context, scope, purpose, responsibilities, and accountabilities.  Some of those teams may be devoted to SE activities; e.g., a team that develops system requirements or a system architecture. Other teams may have a broader role, but still include SE activities; e.g., the team that negotiates terms and conditions with a major subcontractor may be led by a specialist in contracting and negotiation, but may include systems engineers who provide technical insights into the system performance and requirements.
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*[[Enabling Individuals]]
#Teams have various roles that require specific competencies for effective execution; e.g., a SE team that develops a system architecture will require strong competencies in the most critical technologies on which the architecture is dependent and in the application domain of the system, such as finance, transportation, or communication.
 
#Individuals who fill those roles have personal competencies; e.g., the chief systems engineer on a project typically requires strong communication and leadership competencies.
 
#Teams have team dynamics that are influenced by the culture of the organization and by the specific individuals on the team and their competencies.
 
#Overall performance is driven by the team context, scope, and purpose, the  team dynamics, and the team composition.
 
#A BE implements governance that includes SE governance to ensure that SE implements the overall strategy for the BE; e.g., the BE may decide by policy what authority the chief systems engineer on a project has and how decisions by the chief systems engineer are reviewed.
 
#The structure of the BE is driven, at least in part, by the strategy.
 
#Finally, there is an implicit recursion in the relationships between BEs, teams, and individuals; e.g., a BE which is a large global company may have component BEs, many of which may have further component BEs. A large program team may have component subprogram teams, many of which may have further component project teams, and so forth.  Each level of the recursion is enabled and constrained to some degree by the structure, governance, context, and other concepts from both higher and lower levels. The specific nature of those constraints varies across organizations.
 
 
 
The four knowledge areas of this Part explore these relationships in more depth and point the reader to the most important references for more information.
 
  
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==Common Practices==
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There are as many different ways to enable SE performance as there are organizations, and every organization's approach is detailed and unique. Nevertheless, common practices, methods, and considerations do exist. Part 5 uses them as a framework to structure the relevant knowledge.
  
[[File:Businesses,_teams_and_individuals_in_SE.png|center|Frame|800px|Figure 1. Businesses, Teams and Individuals in SE (Figure Developed for BKCASE)]]
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SE activities that support business needs and deliver value are enabled by many factors, including:
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*Culture (see [[Culture]]),
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*SE competencies (see [[Determining Needed Systems Engineering Capabilities in Businesses and Enterprises]]) and how the organization grows and deploys its workforce to acquire them, and
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*SE tooling and infrastructure (see [[Systems Engineering and Management]] in Part 3).
  
==References==  
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==Enterprises and Businesses==
No references have been identified for version 0.5. Please provide any recommendations on additional references in your review.
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The fact that Part 5 uses two terms, “Enterprise” and “Business,” to name a single level of organization, indicates that the two are closely related. In many contexts it is not necessary to make any distinction between them: an {{Term|Enterprise (glossary)|enterprise}} may be a traditional business, and a {{Term|Business (glossary)|business}} can be seen as a special type of enterprise. For the sake of brevity, the more general term "organization" may be used to mean “business or enterprise” throughout Part 5.
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Traditional businesses usually have a legal structure and a relatively centralized control structure. Such a business may be a corporation, or a unit of a company or government agency, that creates a product line or offers services.
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On the other hand, an enterprise can be structured in a way that excludes description as a business. This happens when an enterprise crosses traditional business boundaries, lacks a centralized legal authority, and has relatively loose governance. One example is the healthcare "system" in the US which encompasses hospitals, insurance companies, medical equipment manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, and government regulators. Another is the set of companies that form the supply chain for a manufacturer, such as the thousands of companies whose parts and services Apple uses to create, distribute, and support the iPhone.
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Significant actions that enable SE are often conducted by traditional businesses rather than by less tightly structured enterprises. Even so, organizational context affects how the business approaches SE and therefore how it enables SE performance. A business that sells to the general commercial marketplace typically has far fewer constraints on its SE practices than one which performs contract work for a government agency. A business that creates systems with very demanding characteristics, such as aircraft, typically has a much more rigorous and planned approach to SE than one which creates less demanding systems, such as a smartphone app.
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Traditional businesses are intended to be permanent, and typically offer a {{Term|Portfolio (glossary)|portfolio}} of products and services, introduce new ones, retire old ones, and otherwise seek to grow the value of the business. Sometimes a single product or service has such value and longevity that it spawns a business or enterprise just for its creation, maintenance, and support. The Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft, for example, was developed by a consortium of three corporations that formed a holding company specifically to provide support and upgrade services throughout the in-service life of the aircraft.
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For more on the distinction between businesses and enterprises and the value of systems engineering of enterprises to them, see [[Enterprise Systems Engineering]] in Part 4. [[Systems of Systems (SoS)]], also in Part 4, contrasts the tighter control over SE that is usual for businesses with the looser control that is usual for enterprises lacking a traditional business structure. [[Groupings of Systems]] in Part 2 discusses the Directed SoS to which the traditional business may be equivalent.
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==Teams==
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Teams operate within the context of the businesses in which they reside. This context determines how the team is enabled to perform SE.
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For example, a business may grant a team wide autonomy on key technical decisions, which are made either by team systems engineers or in consultation with team systems engineers.  On the other hand, the same business could instead create a generic set of SE processes that all teams are to tailor and use, constraining the team to adhere to established business policies, practices, and culture. The business could even require that the team gain approval for its tailored SE process from a higher-level technical authority.
  
===Citations===
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Teams are usually formed for a limited duration to accomplish a specific purpose, such as creating a new system or upgrading an existing service or product. Once the purpose has been fulfilled, the team responsible for that effort is usually disbanded and the individuals associated with the effort are assigned to new tasks. Exceptions do happen, however. For example, a team of systems engineers tasked with assisting troubled programs throughout a corporation could persist indefinitely.
List all references cited in the article. Note:  SEBoK 0.5 uses Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed). See the [http://www.bkcase.org/fileadmin/bkcase/files/Wiki_Files__for_linking_/BKCASE_Reference_Guidance.pdf BKCASE Reference Guidance] for additional information.
 
  
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==References==
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===Works Cited===
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None.
 
===Primary References===
 
===Primary References===
All primary references should be listed in alphabetical order. Remember to identify primary references by creating an internal link using the ‘’’reference title only’’’ ([[title]]).  Please do not include version numbers in the links.
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None.
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===Additional References===
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None.
  
===Additional References===
 
All additional references should be listed in alphabetical order.
 
 
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====Article Discussion====
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<center>[[Lean in Healthcare|< Previous Article]] | [[SEBoK Table of Contents|Parent Article]] | [[Enabling Businesses and Enterprises|Next Article >]]</center>
[[{{TALKPAGENAME}}|[Go to discussion page]]]
 
<center>[[Capability Engineering|<- Previous Article]] | [[Main_Page|Parent Article]] | [[Systems Engineering Organizational Strategy|Next Article ->]]</center>
 
 
 
==Signatures==
 
 
 
  
 
[[Category: Part 5]][[Category:Part]]
 
[[Category: Part 5]][[Category:Part]]
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<center>'''SEBoK v. 2.9, released 20 November 2023'''</center>

Revision as of 22:35, 18 November 2023


Lead Authors: Art Pyster, Hillary Sillitto, Alice Squires, Contributing Authors: Dick Fairley, Bud Lawson, Dave Olwell, Deva Henry, Rick Adcock


Part 5 of the Guide to the SE Body of Knowledge (SEBoK) is a guide to knowledge about how an enterpriseenterprise prepares and positions itself to effectively perform the systems engineeringsystems engineering (SE) activities described elsewhere in the SEBoK.

SE activities — how to develop requirementsrequirements, select an appropriate life cyclelife cycle model, and architectarchitect a system of systemssystem of systems, and so on — are covered elsewhere, especially in Part 3, Systems Engineering and Management. An organization that desires to do these things effectively must work through questions like whether to allow a project manager to select the systems engineers he or she employs, and, if so, what competenciescompetencies the project manager might seek in those systems engineers. These are the kinds of questions that Part 5 explores.

The discussion defines three levels of organization: enterpriseenterprise or organization, teamteam, and individual. To adapt an example to a more complex organizational structure, simply decompose enterprises into sub-enterprises and teams into sub-teams, as needed. For more about the different types of enterprises, see Types of Systems in Part 2.

Figure 1 SEBoK Part 5 in context (SEBoK Original). For more detail see Structure of the SEBoK

Knowledge Areas in Part 5

Each part of the SEBoK is composed of knowledge areas (KA). Each KA groups topics around a theme related to the overall subject of the part.

The KAs in Part 5 explore how to the performance of systems engineering from three different lenses:

Common Practices

There are as many different ways to enable SE performance as there are organizations, and every organization's approach is detailed and unique. Nevertheless, common practices, methods, and considerations do exist. Part 5 uses them as a framework to structure the relevant knowledge.

SE activities that support business needs and deliver value are enabled by many factors, including:

Enterprises and Businesses

The fact that Part 5 uses two terms, “Enterprise” and “Business,” to name a single level of organization, indicates that the two are closely related. In many contexts it is not necessary to make any distinction between them: an enterpriseenterprise may be a traditional business, and a businessbusiness can be seen as a special type of enterprise. For the sake of brevity, the more general term "organization" may be used to mean “business or enterprise” throughout Part 5.

Traditional businesses usually have a legal structure and a relatively centralized control structure. Such a business may be a corporation, or a unit of a company or government agency, that creates a product line or offers services.

On the other hand, an enterprise can be structured in a way that excludes description as a business. This happens when an enterprise crosses traditional business boundaries, lacks a centralized legal authority, and has relatively loose governance. One example is the healthcare "system" in the US which encompasses hospitals, insurance companies, medical equipment manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, and government regulators. Another is the set of companies that form the supply chain for a manufacturer, such as the thousands of companies whose parts and services Apple uses to create, distribute, and support the iPhone.

Significant actions that enable SE are often conducted by traditional businesses rather than by less tightly structured enterprises. Even so, organizational context affects how the business approaches SE and therefore how it enables SE performance. A business that sells to the general commercial marketplace typically has far fewer constraints on its SE practices than one which performs contract work for a government agency. A business that creates systems with very demanding characteristics, such as aircraft, typically has a much more rigorous and planned approach to SE than one which creates less demanding systems, such as a smartphone app.

Traditional businesses are intended to be permanent, and typically offer a portfolioportfolio of products and services, introduce new ones, retire old ones, and otherwise seek to grow the value of the business. Sometimes a single product or service has such value and longevity that it spawns a business or enterprise just for its creation, maintenance, and support. The Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft, for example, was developed by a consortium of three corporations that formed a holding company specifically to provide support and upgrade services throughout the in-service life of the aircraft.

For more on the distinction between businesses and enterprises and the value of systems engineering of enterprises to them, see Enterprise Systems Engineering in Part 4. Systems of Systems (SoS), also in Part 4, contrasts the tighter control over SE that is usual for businesses with the looser control that is usual for enterprises lacking a traditional business structure. Groupings of Systems in Part 2 discusses the Directed SoS to which the traditional business may be equivalent.

Teams

Teams operate within the context of the businesses in which they reside. This context determines how the team is enabled to perform SE.

For example, a business may grant a team wide autonomy on key technical decisions, which are made either by team systems engineers or in consultation with team systems engineers. On the other hand, the same business could instead create a generic set of SE processes that all teams are to tailor and use, constraining the team to adhere to established business policies, practices, and culture. The business could even require that the team gain approval for its tailored SE process from a higher-level technical authority.

Teams are usually formed for a limited duration to accomplish a specific purpose, such as creating a new system or upgrading an existing service or product. Once the purpose has been fulfilled, the team responsible for that effort is usually disbanded and the individuals associated with the effort are assigned to new tasks. Exceptions do happen, however. For example, a team of systems engineers tasked with assisting troubled programs throughout a corporation could persist indefinitely.

References

Works Cited

None.

Primary References

None.

Additional References

None.


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SEBoK v. 2.9, released 20 November 2023