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TEN RULES FOR COMMON
SENSE PROGRAM
MANAGEMENT
The basis of these ten rules is guided by work of Col. Lee Battle
(USAF), the director of the Corona/Discover satellite system
Corona, first launched in 1959, was a military reconnaissance satellite operated by the CIA
    used for photo surveillance of the Soviet Union. The novel and movie Ice Station Zebra was
            based on a missing film canister from Discover, a Corona follow on vehicle.
2
Ten Rules of Common Sense Program
3
                    Management
    1. Put Together The Right   6.   Make The Program
       Team                          Schedule The Leading
                                     Metric
    2. Execute Or Suffer The    7.   Solve Problems When
        Consequences                 They Appear
    3. Establish A Credible     8.   Test And Verify
        Baseline
    4. Control The Baseline     9. Communicate
    5. Manage Risk              10. Deliver
1. Put Together The Right Team
4


       Acquire the best people possible, empower then
        with enough authority to do their jobs, and hold
        them accountable
       Organize to be lean and mean
       Build and maintain healthy, open, professional
        relationships with team members, counterparts, and
        suppliers
2. Execute or Suffer the Consequences
5


       The program manager is the “Captain of the ship”
       Treat your time like it is gold
       All communications must relate to program
        execution and coordination
       You can get help on anything other than taking
        responsibility for executing the program
3. Establish A Credible Baseline
6


       An improperly baselined program can not be
        successfully executed
       Pay attention to systems engineering, requirements
        analysis, management, and traceability, change
        control, design reviews, and test and verification
        planning
4. Control the Baseline
7


       The baseline is the lifeblood of the program
       Uncontrolled changes can destroy a program
       All changes impact the baseline
       Do not accept changes that increase risk
       Always have a prioritized set of requirements in
        your pocket
5. Manage Risk
8


       Risk never goes away on its own
       Robust and proactive risk management is always
        required
       Know the program’s risks and who owns them
       Eliminating risk is not feasible
       Don’t let risk management become a reporting
        process – use it to manage the prorgam
6. Make The Program Schedule The
9
      Leading Indicator
       Establish an Integrated Master Schedule (IMS) and
        Integrated Master Plan (IMP) based on assessments
        of increasing program maturity
       Know the critical and near-critical paths and the
        dependencies
       Manage the critical path the resources
7. Solve Problems When They Appear
10


        Hit failures hard, unresolved problems will haunt the
         program
        Prepare for problems
8. Test and Verify
11


        One test is worth a thousand opinions
        “test as you fly” means, testing must be as close as
         the real thing as possible
        Make decisions based on real data
9. Communicate
12


        Communication is more important than organizing
        Information is power
        Take control of the reporting process
        Employ meetings with well defined agendas
10. Deliver
13


        It’s all about delivering the needed capabilities to
         the user
        Each requirement and deliverable must be tied to
         the Concept of Operations (ConOps)
        Getting something into the users hands early
         provides feedback for the next block, spiral or
         iteration

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Ten rules for common sense program management

  • 1. TEN RULES FOR COMMON SENSE PROGRAM MANAGEMENT The basis of these ten rules is guided by work of Col. Lee Battle (USAF), the director of the Corona/Discover satellite system
  • 2. Corona, first launched in 1959, was a military reconnaissance satellite operated by the CIA used for photo surveillance of the Soviet Union. The novel and movie Ice Station Zebra was based on a missing film canister from Discover, a Corona follow on vehicle. 2
  • 3. Ten Rules of Common Sense Program 3 Management 1. Put Together The Right 6. Make The Program Team Schedule The Leading Metric 2. Execute Or Suffer The 7. Solve Problems When Consequences They Appear 3. Establish A Credible 8. Test And Verify Baseline 4. Control The Baseline 9. Communicate 5. Manage Risk 10. Deliver
  • 4. 1. Put Together The Right Team 4  Acquire the best people possible, empower then with enough authority to do their jobs, and hold them accountable  Organize to be lean and mean  Build and maintain healthy, open, professional relationships with team members, counterparts, and suppliers
  • 5. 2. Execute or Suffer the Consequences 5  The program manager is the “Captain of the ship”  Treat your time like it is gold  All communications must relate to program execution and coordination  You can get help on anything other than taking responsibility for executing the program
  • 6. 3. Establish A Credible Baseline 6  An improperly baselined program can not be successfully executed  Pay attention to systems engineering, requirements analysis, management, and traceability, change control, design reviews, and test and verification planning
  • 7. 4. Control the Baseline 7  The baseline is the lifeblood of the program  Uncontrolled changes can destroy a program  All changes impact the baseline  Do not accept changes that increase risk  Always have a prioritized set of requirements in your pocket
  • 8. 5. Manage Risk 8  Risk never goes away on its own  Robust and proactive risk management is always required  Know the program’s risks and who owns them  Eliminating risk is not feasible  Don’t let risk management become a reporting process – use it to manage the prorgam
  • 9. 6. Make The Program Schedule The 9 Leading Indicator  Establish an Integrated Master Schedule (IMS) and Integrated Master Plan (IMP) based on assessments of increasing program maturity  Know the critical and near-critical paths and the dependencies  Manage the critical path the resources
  • 10. 7. Solve Problems When They Appear 10  Hit failures hard, unresolved problems will haunt the program  Prepare for problems
  • 11. 8. Test and Verify 11  One test is worth a thousand opinions  “test as you fly” means, testing must be as close as the real thing as possible  Make decisions based on real data
  • 12. 9. Communicate 12  Communication is more important than organizing  Information is power  Take control of the reporting process  Employ meetings with well defined agendas
  • 13. 10. Deliver 13  It’s all about delivering the needed capabilities to the user  Each requirement and deliverable must be tied to the Concept of Operations (ConOps)  Getting something into the users hands early provides feedback for the next block, spiral or iteration