Summary

At maturity level 4, acquirers establish quantitative objectives for quality and process performance and use them as criteria in managing processes.

Description

Quantitative objectives are based on the needs of the customer, end users, organization, and process implementers. Quality and process performance is understood in statistical terms and is managed throughout the life of processes.

For selected subprocesses, specific measures of process performance are collected and statistically analyzed. When selecting subprocesses for analyses, it is critical to understand the relationships between different subprocesses and their impact on achieving the objectives for quality and process performance. Such an approach helps to ensure that subprocess monitoring using statistical and other quantitative techniques is applied to where it has the most overall value to the business. Process performance baselines and models can be used to help set quality and process performance objectives that help achieve business objectives.

A critical distinction between maturity levels 3 and 4 is the predictability of process performance. At maturity level 4, the performance of processes is controlled using statistical and other quantitative techniques and predictions are based, in part, on a statistical analysis of fine-grained process data.

Contains

Organizational Process Performance (OPP) (CMMI-ACQ)
The purpose of Organizational Process Performance (OPP) (CMMI-ACQ) is to establish and maintain a quantitative understan…
Quantitative Project Management (QPM) (CMMI-ACQ)
The purpose of Quantitative Project Management (QPM) (CMMI-ACQ) is to quantitatively manage the project to achieve the p…