Difference between revisions of "Lean Systems Engineering (LSE) (glossary)"

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(Created page with '''<blockquote>A comprehensive, integrated plan that identifies the acquisition approach and describes the business, technical, and support strategies that management will follow ...')
 
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''<blockquote>A comprehensive, integrated plan that identifies the acquisition approach and describes the business, technical, and support strategies that management will follow to manage program risks and meet program objectives. The Acquisition Strategy should define the relationship between the acquisition phases and work efforts, and key program events such as decision points, reviews, contract awards, test activities, production lot/delivery quantities, and operational deployment objectives. (DAU February 19, 2010)</blockquote>''
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''<blockquote>(1) The application of lean principles, practices and tools to SE to enhance the delivery of value to the system's stakeholders.</blockquote>''
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''<blockquote>(2) Lean SE (LSE)  is the area of synergy between lean thinking and SE, with the goal to deliver the best life-cycle value for technically complex systems with minimal waste; under the lean SE philosophy, mission assurance is non-negotiable, and any task that is legitimately required for success must be included, but it should be well-planned and executed with minimal waste. </blockquote>''
  
 
====Source====
 
====Source====
DAU. February 19, 2010. ''Defense Acquisition Guidebook (DAG)''. Ft. Belvoir, VA, USA: Defense Acquisition University (DAU)/U.S. Department of Defense (DoD).  
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None cited.
  
 
===Discussion===
 
===Discussion===

Revision as of 18:40, 17 May 2011

(1) The application of lean principles, practices and tools to SE to enhance the delivery of value to the system's stakeholders.

(2) Lean SE (LSE) is the area of synergy between lean thinking and SE, with the goal to deliver the best life-cycle value for technically complex systems with minimal waste; under the lean SE philosophy, mission assurance is non-negotiable, and any task that is legitimately required for success must be included, but it should be well-planned and executed with minimal waste.

Source

None cited.

Discussion

Discussion as to why this is the "consensus" definition for the SEBoK.