Title: Using CMMI, ITIL, and PMBoK to Improve Proposal Operations
1Using CMMI, ITIL, and PMBoK to Improve Proposal
Operations
- Presenter
- Brenda Crist Lohfeld Consulting Group
2Current Proposal Practices
- Proposal Management Books Often Focus on Proposal
Management Basics - Capture and Positioning
- Bid Request
- Bid Decision
- Proposal Scheduling and Development
- Proposal Planning
- Review Teams
These processes are tried and true and promote
collaboration and delivery on schedule
3Do These Processes Meet All Your Job Needs?
4Does Your Job Involve Multiple Functions?
- Do You Manage Multiple Projects?
- Staffing and Resources
- Budgets and Communications
- Cost and Quality Control
- Do You Provide These Services?
- Proposal Systems Design
- Pipeline Management
- Knowledge Management
- Configuration Management
- Template Creation
- Training Services
- Do You Promote Continual Improvement?
5What Can We Learn from Industry to Improve Our
Management of These Tasks?
6We Can Take Best Practices From
- The Project Management Institute, Project
Management Body of Knowledge (PMBoK) can help us
effectively manage multiple projects - Information Technology Infrastructure Library
(ITIL) can help us deliver better proposal
services - Capability Maturity Model Integrated (CMMI) can
help us smoothly integrate proposal functions - ISO 90012000 can help us improve consistency and
quality
We write about industry best practices daily
lets use them to improve proposal management
7What Can We Learn from PMBoK?
8PMBoK Highlights
Offers a framework for project management backed
by project management best practices
9What Can We Take From PMBoK?
- Specific practices for improved
- Project Planning
- Schedule Management
- Quality Management
- Communications Management
- Cost Management
- Risk Management
We can also use PMBoK methods for managing two or
more projects concurrently
10Project Planning and Scheduling
- In advance of proposal activities
- Develop a realistic pipeline to determine
workload (preferably Using a Customer
Relationship Management (CRM) Tool) - Develop project plans with WBSs and schedules for
10, 15, 30, and 45 day turnarounds - Establish milestones for major capture/proposal
activities - Establish agreements with vendors and consultants
- Manage to the schedule reporting status daily
against the milestones - Proactively monitor and record variance of
planned vs. actual activities
Pre-planning Commitment Success
11Examples
Create a Pipeline
Create a Work Breakdown Schedule
12Cost Management
- Budget realistically
- Plan ways to drive down proposal development
costs - Proposal costs are often unpredictable leave
plenty of cushion in the budget - Implement cost controls and break down work into
small incremental pieces - Measure performance
- Maintain historic cost data for the next
budgeting cycle
You will be a hero if you deliver your proposal
under your BP budget
13Tips for Driving Down Costs
- Buy supplies in discounts like paper, toner
cartridges, and binders and tabs - Negotiate discount rates for hardware
maintenance (printers, copiers) - Establish agreements with set rates for services
vendors like writing or editing - Create a knowledgebase of reusable written
materials (resumes, graphics) - Hold brainstorming sessions after hours w/dinner
so billable hours are not lost - Limit review team membership
- Control color printer use
Re-invest savings back into the training of your
staff
14Quality Management
- Incorporate quality standards
- ISO 90012000, PMBoK, CMMI
- Implement a Quality Assurance Program
- Define quality metrics
- Define processes for accomplishing milestones
- Identify artifacts resulting from reviews
- Implement Quality Controls
- Compliance and solution reviews
- Editorial and document reviews
- Book check and media reviews
- Evaluate and continuously improve quality
The quality of the proposal reflects your
companys quality
15Incremental Quality Controls
Build time in for quality reviews throughout the
proposal life cycle
16Human Resources Management
- Define Staffing Plan
- Define roles, authority, and responsibilities
- Define competencies, experience, education,
certifications - Maintain a realistic staffing plan for program
and specific proposals - Develop a Training Plan
- Define Program-Level Plan
- Define Individual Development Plans
- Attend APMP events
- Develop a Retention Plan
- Spot bonus pool or bonus plan
- Alternate work schedules for long hours
- Morale boosters
Develop plans and objectives for training and
retaining valued capture and proposal management
employees
17Communications Management
- Five things we can learn from PMBoK
- Create a communications plan and train members in
its use - Identify the most effective and secure methods
for information distribution - Define the best way for communicating with
stakeholders/participants - Identify how to report status
- Define your risk escalation path
Communications represent a significant part of a
proposal managers daily activities
18Communications Plan
- Communication Plan Outline
- Roles and Responsibilities
- Proposal Communications
- Contracting Officers
- Team Members
- Executives
- Capture and SMEs
- Status Meetings
- Proposal Security
- Status Reporting
- Risk Mitigation / Escalation
19Risk Management
- Define a risk management plan or processes with
escalation paths - Identify major risks
- Proposal program risks Lack of resources
(personnel, technology, funds), Lack of training,
Lack of time - Proposal risks Solution gaps, Lack of key
personnel, Missing price information, Unforeseen
RFP changes/amendments - Maintain a risk mitigation log
- Identify the risk
- Person responsible for mitigating the risk
- Risk mitigation timeframe and due date
- Risk mitigation outcome
- Discuss risk mitigation during daily standup
meetings and at routine staff meetings
Risk Log
Keep management aware and focused on potential
capture and proposal risks to mitigate
deficiencies
20What Can We Learn from ITIL?
21Information Technology Infrastructure Library
(ITIL) Framework
If your job requires more than just proposal
management, ITIL offers a framework for the
delivery of services
22The ITIL Framework Defined
- Service Strategy provides guidance on how to
design, develop and implement service management - Service Design describes how to convert your
service strategy objectives into service assets - Service Transition describes how to ensure
service elements (applications, infrastructure
knowledge, facilities) are delivered on schedule - Service Operations provides strategies for
service support (incident, problem, access mgmt,
and service delivery (infrastructure and security
management) - Continual Service Improvement measures
performance, implements improvements, and ensures
expected results are achieved
ITIL is an IT infrastructure and services
framework originated by the UK Office of
Government Commerce
23Service Strategy and Design
- Develop Your Service Strategy
- What services are you offering in addition to
proposal management and production? - Knowledge management
- Data calls/information requests
- Change and configuration management
- Customer relationship management (CRM)
- Pipeline management
- Proposal facilities management
- Task order registration and processing
- Who are your internal/external clients?
- What assets do you need?
Develop a service strategy that meets the needs
of your internal and external clients
24Knowledge Management Services
25ITIL Knowledge Management Tips
- Make knowledge easy to access and intuitive to
find - Create an electronic library using directory
folders or a collaboration tool - Create instructions for a cheat sheet for finding
information - Restrict access to the knowledgebase as
appropriate for your company
Dont re-create the wheel build a knowledgebase
26Items to Put in the Knowledgebase
- Resumes (updated annually)
- Past performance summaries (updated annually)
- Processes for program planning, cost control,
human resources, communication, risk, quality,
and monitoring - Management factoids about retention, degrees,
certifications - Processes for transition, incident, problem,
change, configuration, release, asset,
availability, capacity, and security management - Technical architectures and system flows for
operations - Performance management success stories to
demonstrate performance at or above industry
averages - Problems and solutions
- Kudo letters and success stories
- Proposal templates
- Art library containing photos and graphics
27Do You Feel Like a Help Desk?
- Are you always fielding questions about company
characteristics? Like number of employees,
certifications or revenue? - Are you always asked for past performance
summaries or resumes? - Are you always asked for sample graphics or
photos?
If you feel like a help desk, implement ITIL best
practices for service management to function most
efficiently
28Consider Adding a Self-Help Feature
- Work with company executives to determine what
type of knowledge should be included in the
self-help feature - Determine how you will restrict access based on
roles - Identify what subset of the knowledgebase can be
shared - Setup policies for adding, updating, and
maintaining data
The self-help feature can benefit the company by
providing secure, accurate, consistent, and
timely information
29Configuration Management Services
30ITIL Configuration Management Tips
Keeping knowledge under configuration control
increases proposal preparation efficiency
31Items to Put Under CM Control
- Capture Plans and CRM data
- Solicitation, QAs, amendments, BAFOs, debriefs
- Proposal Management Plans and schedules
- Kick-off meeting agendas
- Compliance matrices, storyboards, outlines
- Templates, graphics, photos
- Background information
- Input from authors
- Blue, black, pink, red, and gold team versions of
the proposal/task order or oral presentations - Resumes, past performance summaries
- Final proposals (hardcopy and softcopy)
- Proposal budgets and metrics
32What Can We Learn from CMMI?
33Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI)
Level 5 Optimizing
Focus on process improvement
CMMI is a process improvement approach
Level 4 Quantitatively Managed
Process is measured and controlled
Level 3 Defined
Process is defined, repeatable, and proactive
Level 2 Managed
Process is characterized but is often reactive
Level 1 Initial
Process in unpredictable, poorly controlled, and
reactive
34Continual Process Improvement
- Obtain buy-in for a CPI Program
- Define SOPs for performing your job
- Establish metrics
- Allocate sufficient resources to collect metrics
and analyze findings - Use IT to facilitate CPI data capture and
analysis - Monitor performance and record lessons learned
- Identify and implement improvements
- Control improvements to verify they achieve the
intended result
Start with one or two areas you wish to improve
35Suggested Measurements
- Win ratio
- Completed on schedule
- Completed within budget
- Free of editorial defects
- No unauthorized changes made to baselines
- All proposal artifacts are kept under CM control
- Internal clients express high satisfaction with
service
Select performance metrics and use them to
measure how well you perform
36Training
- Use feedback and metrics to identify training
needs - Train external clients Proposal training
classes, secure, just-in-time training
knowledgebase - Proposal team training On-the-job training,
knowledgebase, formal proposal training, APMP
events, professional certification programs
APMP NCA Professional Day 2008
A well-trained team improves efficiency,
increases retention, and improves morale
37Consider Using Software Development Techniques to
Facilitate Proposal Management
38Software Development Methods Applied to Proposal
Development
- The Software Engineering Institute (SEI)
originally designed CMM/CMMI to define what
processes and activities were needed to develop
software - Many best practices were developed to specify how
these processes and activities should be
accomplished - Waterfall Method
- Spiral Method
- Iterative Development Method
- Agile Method
- Plug and Chug Method
Evaluate each solicitation to determine the best
process for developing a winning proposal response
39Proposal Development Methods to Consider
- SW Development Techniques
- Storyboard
- Annotated Outline
- Pink Team
- Red Team
- Gold Team
- Production
- Delivery
- Waterfall
- Plug and Chug
- Iterative Method
- Spiral Method
- Agile Method
Consider using an iterative development technique
if your solution is not established
40Burn Rate/Burn Down Chart
Burn Rate/Burn Down Chart
- When using an iterative/agile development method
link accomplishments to a Burn Rate/Burn Down
Chart, so executives can assess progress in
comparison to the schedule
A Burn Rate Chart illustrates your performance
against the budgeted schedule and cost
41What Can We Learn from ISO 90012000?
42ISO 90012000 Highlights
- ISO 9000 is a family of quality management
standards maintained by the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) - To become ISO 90012000 certified you need
- A set of procedures covering your business
process - A plan for monitoring processes
- Records demonstrating you followed your business
processes - A plan to check output for defects and a plan for
corrective action - Regular review processes
- A plan for continual improvement
43We Can Learn to Write Effective SOPs Using ISO
Guidance
- Procedures should have
- Clear instructions and a schedule
- Owner(s)
- Metrics
- Monitoring methods
- Reporting methods
- Audit methods
Set expectations and communicate how you will
perform proposal management activities using SOPs
44Sample SOP
45Internal Audits
- Conduct quarterly audits to determine if
artifacts are - Present
- Complete
- Secure
- Correctly located
- Require updating
Internal audits provide a discipline for ensuring
your records are present, secure, up-to-date, and
easily located
46To determine if industry best practices can help,
make a list of your job functions
47To determine if industry best practices can help,
make a list of your job functions
- Proposal Process Management
- Proposal Project Management
- Proposal Service Management
- Proposal Performance Management
Process Mgmt
Functional Categories
Service Mgmt
Project Mgmt
Performance Mgmt
Proposal management is a multi-dimensional
process often involving project, service, and
performance management
48Functional Breakdown
- Process Management
- Capture Management
- Proposal Management
- Coordination Management
- Graphics/Art Management
- Production Management
- Project Management
- Project Planning / Scheduling
- Cost Management
- Quality Management
- Human Resources Management
- Communications Management
- Risk Management
- Service Management
- Knowledge Management
- Pipeline Management
- CRM Management
- Change Management
- Configuration Management
- Performance Management
- Measurement and Analysis
- Training
- Continual Improvement
List and categorize your job functions to
determine if you can benefit from industry best
practices
49Link Functions to Best Practices
Link your job functions to best practices and
create SOPs to enhance your performance
50Summary
- As a proposal professional your job is complex
and demanding - It involves the management of multiple processes,
projects, and services simultaneously - Learn from industry and adapt best practices and
lessons learned to help as needed - Pass your lessons learned and best practices onto
others
51Thank You Brenda Crist APMP NCA Vice
President Professional Day Committee Chairperson
2009 Principal, Lohfeld Consulting
Group www.lohfeldconsulting.com bcrist_at_lohfeldcon
sulting.com 301-466-9566