Title: EEE492'25 Capability Maturity Model CMM
1EEE492.25 Capability Maturity Model (CMM)
Royal Military College of Canada Electrical and
Computer Engineering
Reference HvV 6.6
- Dr. Terry Shepard
- shepard_at_rmc.ca
- 1-613-541-6000 ext. 6031
Major JW Paul Jeff.Paul_at_rmc.ca 1-613-541-6000
ext. 6091
With contributions from SEG members
2What is the purpose of 492A?
- Software Process and Quality
- The implication is that by following an effective
process one will produce better software - We have looked at many discrete processes, but
- how do we know if an organization is using these
concepts, or just using the buzzwords? - One Answer CMM
- trained appraisers for CMM
- Standard CMMI Appraisal Method for Process
Improvement (SCAMPI) - note - there are other standards
- ISO 9000
- also CMM is being adapted to agile processes
3Some Definitions
- Software Process
- set of activities, methods, practices, and
transformations used to develop and maintain
software and associated products - project plans, design documents, code, test
cases, user manuals - Software Process Capability
- knowing what the above will give you
- Software Process Performance
- actual results from the above
- Software Process Maturity
- how well the process is specific process is
explicitly defined, managed, measured,
controlled, and effective - also includes consistency and change
4Software Process Improvement
- Six steps to improve software capabilities
through process improvements (one method) - 1. Understand the current development process or
processes - 2. Develop a vision of the desired process
- 3. List the required process improvement actions
in order of priority - 4. Produce a plan to implement the actions
- 5. Commit the resources and execute the plan
- 6. Start over at step 1
5Immature Software Organization
- Does not mean they produce poor code
- Characterized by
- ad-hoc/improvised processes (project dependant)
- process are not rigorously followed (if
specified) - reactionary to immediate crisis (fighting
fires) - quality and function compromised to meet schedule
- quality related activities often eliminated due
to schedule pressures - schedules and budgets routinely exceeded
- no objective basis for measuring quality
- hard to predict future events...
6Mature Software Organizations
- Does not mean they produce good code, but
- Characterized by
- organization wide ability for managing software
development and maintenance - process is integral to the organization
- communicated to staff staff follow process
- process is useable and useful
- process is not static (evolves in controlled
manner) - fit for use updated as necessary
- objective and quantitative quality metrics
- schedules and budgets based on historical data
- and thus usually achieved
7The Birth of CMM
- 1986, the Software Engineering Institute (SEI),
investigated maturity framework (Watts
Humphrey) - 1987 questionaires
- software capability evaluation
- maturity questionaire
- 1991 - CMM
- a set of key processes and recommended practices
- guidance on how to gain control of their process
and how to evolve toward a culture of software
engineering and management excellence
8Observations that motivated CMM
- productivity and quality gains from methodologies
and technologies not near what was expected in
the early 80s - difficult to do better in a chaotic process
- in undisciplined organizations, most projects
produce poor results - in undisciplined organizations, some projects
produce excellent results - usually the result of heroic effort
- repeating the result means repeating the heroics
9Capability Maturity Model (CMM)
- used as a standard for appraising the current
state of the organizations software process - used as a guide for identifying and prioritizing
the actions comprising the software process
improvement effort - Made up of 5 levels and 18 key process areas
(KPAs) - a CMM-based maturity questionnaire may be used
to assess the software capability of a particular
organization - government may use this to assess the capability
of potential software development contractors
10CMM Levels
- 1 Initial Competent People and Heroics
- 2 Repeatable Project Management process
- 3 Defined Engineering Process Org Support
- 4 Managed Product and Process Quality
- 5 Optimizing Continuous Process Improvement
11Basic descriptions of CMM levels
software process is ad hoc, maybe even chaotic
few processes are defined success depends on
individual effort and heroics basic project
management practices to track cost, schedule,
functionality necessary process discipline is in
place to repeat earlier successes on projects
with similar applications software process for
both management and engineering activities is
documented, standardized, integrated into a
standard software process all projects use an
approved, tailored version of the organizations
standard software process for developing and
maintaining software detailed measures of the
software process and product quality are
collected both the software process and products
are quantitatively understood and
controlled continuous process improvement is
enabled by quantitative feedback from the process
and from piloting innovative ideas and
technologies
- Initial
- Repeatable
- Defined
- Managed
- Optimizing
1 2 3 4 5
Reference www.sei.cmu.edu/cmm/cmm_sum.html
12SW-CMM Structure
13Common Features
- Commitment to Perform (CO)
- groups all generic practices related to creating
policies and securing sponsorship for process
improvement efforts. - Ability to Perform (AB)
- groups all generic practices related to ensuring
that the project and/or organization has the
resources it needs to pursue process improvement. - Directing Implementation (DI)
- groups the generic practices related to
collecting, measuring, and analyzing data related
to processes. The purpose of these activities is
to provide insight into the performance of
processes. - Verifying Implementation (VE)
- groups all generic practices related to verifying
that the projects and/or organizations
activities conform to requirements, processes,
and procedures.
14Structure of CMM
maturity levels
indicate
process capability
contain
key process areas
achieve
organized by
goals
common features
address
contain
implementation / institutionalization
key practices
describe
activities / infrastructure
15Key Process Areas (KPAs)
- each maturity level (except 1) is decomposed into
several key process areas that indicate the areas
an organization should focus on to improve its
software process - a cluster of related activities which
collectively achieve a set of important goals - when the goals are accomplished on a continuing
basis, the KPA is said to be institutionalized
16Key Process Areas (contd)
- KPAs are enhanced in succeeding levels
- to achieve a maturity level, the KPAs for that
level must be satisfied - there are other processes deemed to be not key to
achieving a maturity level they are not
addressed by the model
17Key Process Areas (KPAs)
- Individual Effort Heroics (no KPAs)
- Requirements Management
- SW Project Planning
- SW Project Tracking Oversight
- SW Subcontract Management
- SW Quality Assurance
- SW Configuration Management
- Organization Process Focus
- Organization Process Defintion
- Training Program
- Integrated SW management
- SW Product Engineering
- Intergroup Coordination
- Peer Reviews
- Quantitative Process management
- SW Quality Management
- Defect Prevention
- Technology Change Management
- Process Change Management
1
initial
2
repeatable
3
defined
4
managed
optimizing
5
18SW-CMM Maturity Levels
Optimizing (5) Continuously Improving Process
Process Control
Managed (4) Predictable Process
Process Measurement
Defined (3) Standard, Consistent Process
Process Definition
Repeatable (2) Disciplined Process
Basic Management Control
Initial (1) Heroics
19The Initial Process (no KPA)
- Risk of Total Chaos
- No management mechanism in place to plan and
track the work of individuals - If procedures are established they are abandoned
during a crisis - PM Panic Management (make the biggest fire
smaller) - tends to be continuous
- capability of org characteristic of individuals
Basic Management Control
Initial (1)
20To Improve to Repeatable Process
- Understand the difference between speed and
progress - Basic project control
- Project management
- project size estimation
- Management oversight
- quarterly review of process
- Quality assurance
- establish a QA organization (? 5-6 of
development org) - Change control
21The Repeatable Process
- Provides control over the way the organization
establishes its plan and commitments - basic software management controls exist for
tracking cost, schedule and functionality - Experienced at doing similar work
- realistic project commitments based upon previous
results
Process Definition
Repeatable (2)
Basic Management Control
22Repeatable (level 2) KPAs
- Software configuration management
- Software quality assurance
- Software subcontract management
- Software project tracking and oversight
- Software project planning
- Requirements management
- major risks to the organization at this level
- introduction of new tools will affect process
- entering new territory, by trying new products
- can be developing new types of products
- major organizational changes can be disruptive
23Getting to the Defined Process
- Establish a process group
- ? 1-3 of development org
- Establish a development process architecture
- describes the technical and management activities
for proper execution of the development process - Introduce a family of software engineering
methods and technologies - design and code inspection
- formal/semi-formal design methods
- library control systems
- comprehensive testing methods
24The Defined Process
- Processes for development and maintenance of
software is standardized across the corporation - software engineering is integrated into the
larger engineering management processes - The Acid-test
- When faced with a crisis they will continue to
use the process that has been defined (might
happen at level 2 as well) - But only qualitative
- Little data to support the effectiveness of the
process - need to move to a quantitative process
Process Measurement
Defined (3)
Process Definition
25Defined (level 3) KPAs
- Organization Software process definition
- Organization Software process focus
- Training program
- Integrated software management
- Peer reviews (including inspections)
- Intergroup coordination
- Software product engineering
26To Improve to the Managed Process
- Establish basic process measurements to identify
quality and cost of each process step - cost-benefit analysis aimed at continuous
improvement of the process in a generic way - Establish a process database and provide
resources to maintain it (gathering of data) - Assess the quality of the product at each step
- monitor and revise product quality goals as needed
27The Managed Process
Process Control
- Productivity and quality are quantitatively
measured across the organization - Key software processes are instrumented
- statistical quality control is employed
- Definition of the measured data is key
- only gather what you need ()
- process data must not be used to compare projects
or evaluate individuals
Managed (4)
Process Measurement
28Managed (level 4) KPA
- Quality management
- Quantitative process management
29To Improve to the Optimizing Process
- Causal analysis
- eliminate the causes of defects
- Orderly transition of new technologies into the
organization - Use process data to analyze and change the
process - continuous improvement
- of process to improve product quality
- of productivity
- of time needed to develop
30The Optimizing Process
Optimizing (5)
- Organizational focus is on continuous process
improvement is supported by quantitative trend
analysis as to process strengths and weaknesses - Process innovations and new technologies are
introduced when supported by cost benefit
analysis - Data is available to tune the process itself
- Ability to put the resources where it counts
Process Control
31Optimizing KPA
- Process change management
- Technology change management
- Defect prevention
32CMM vs XP
CMM LEVEL
- Competent people heroics
- Requirements Management
- SW Project Planning
- SW Project Tracking Oversight
- SW Subcontract Management
- SW Quality Assurance
- SW Configuration Management
- Organization Process Focus
- Organization Process Defintion
- Training Program
- Integrated SW management
- SW Product Engineering
- Intergroup Coordination
- Peer Reviews
- Quantitative Process management
- SW Quality Management
- Defect Prevention
- Technology Change Management
- Process Change Management
1
- - - - - - -
2
3
4
5
33CMM representations
- two representations
- provide alternative approaches to process
improvement for familiarity with either approach - represent two different philosophical approaches
to process improvement
Reference Menezes, CrossTalk
www.stsc.hill.af.mil/cmmi/more_cmmi.asp
34CMM Representations (contd)
- Representation 1. focus on the organization as a
whole and provide a road map of successive stages
aimed at improving the organizations ability to
understand and control its process - staged view (comparable to SW-CMM)
- Representation 2. focus on individual processes,
allowing the organization to choose which process
or set of processes need to have more capability - continuous view (comparable to systems
engineering and IPD models)
Reference Menezes, CrossTalk
35Representations (contd)
- each representation is a 600 page document
- equivalent staging
- sometimes desirable to convert an organizations
capability level achievements into a maturity
level - cant translate from maturity level back
capability level
Reference Menezes, CrossTalk
www.stsc.hill.af.mil/cmmi/more_cmmi.asp
36Continuous Representation
- groups process areas into
- process management
- project management
- engineering
- support
- for each group, assigns a rating from 0 to 5,
according to an organizations performance on
process areas in that group
37Staged Representation
- groups process areas by maturity level
- allows an overall assessment leading to an
assessment of the maturity level observed in an
organization
38Some Differences between Representations
Reference www.sei.cmu.edu/cmmi/adoption/cmmi-faq
.html
39Issues with the CMM
- key process areas (KPAs) focus mostly on
activities and supporting artifacts associated
with a conventional waterfall process - requirements specifications, documented plans,
quality assurance audits and inspections, and
documented processes and procedures - very few of the KPAs address the evolving results
(i.e., the software product) and associated
engineering artifacts (use case models, design
models, source code, or executable code)
Reference Royce, CMM vs. CMMI
40Issues (contd)
- no emphasis on the architecting/design process,
assessment process, or deployment process - which have proven to be key discriminators for
project success - also overemphasizes peer reviews, inspections and
traditional Quality Assurance policing methods - although manual reviews and inspections may be
capable of uncovering 60 of errors, they rarely
uncover the architecturally significant flaws
Reference Royce, CMM vs. CMMI
41Issues (contd)
- most implementations of CMM drive organizations
to produce more documents, more checkpoints, more
artifacts, more traceability, more reviews, and
more plans - thicker documents, more detailed information, and
longer meetings are considered better - however, agile methods may be able to be mapped
on to CMM stay tuned!
Reference Royce, CMM vs. CMMI
42State of the Industry
Carnagie Melon Software Enginieering
Institute Sofware CMM - CBA, IPI, SPA and SCAMPI
Appraisal Results
100
August 2001 Goal for most organizations is to
achieve level 3 (Royce)
90
Based on most recent assessment since 1997, of
1018 organizations
80
September 2005
70
Based on most recent assessment since 2001, of
1612 organizations reporting a maturity rating
60
50
of Organizations
40
30
20
10
0
Initial
Repeatable
Defined
Managed
Optimizing
43(No Transcript)
44Short-comings and Future of CMM
- Surprise, surprise - CMM is not a silver bullet
- a mature process is no guarantee of a quality
product - Not well suited for smaller companies / projects
- Personal Software Process (PSP) is one attempt to
address this need - Crude and harsh 5-point scale
- if you fail just one of the KPAs, you fail the
level - CMMs now exist for software, people, software
acquisition, systems engineering and integrated
product development - latest initiative CMM Integration (CMMI)
45Evolution of CMM
- initial Capability Maturity Model was developed
specifically to address software process maturity - it was successfully adopted and used in many
domains - other CMMs were developed for other disciplines
and functions - CMMs now exist for software, people, software
acquisition, systems engineering, and integrated
product development
46Not Just Software CMM
47Decoding abbreviations
- SCE Software Capability Evaluation
- SCDE Software Development Capability Evaluation
- SA-CMM Software Acquisition
- P-CMM People
- SE-CMM Systems Engineering
- SSE-CMM Systems Security Engineering
- IPD-CMM Integrated Product Development
- CMMI CMM Integration
48Process Standards we mostly dont have time to
look at
DoD-Std 2167A
SW CMM
EIA/IEEE J-Std-016
Mil-Std 498
IEEE/EIA Std 12207
ISO 9000 series
ISO/IEC 12207
Reference http//www.software.org/quagmire/
49Recall our six steps
- Software Capability Maturity Model is not the
only method
- Other options are available
- ISO 9000 certification
- ISO 15504 (SPICE)
- Software Process Improvement and Capability
dEtermination http//www.sqi.gu.edu.au/spice/ - introduction of an agile method
- Also www.spin.org Ottawa Software Process
Improvement Network - many other SPINs exist
50Supplemental References
- Capability Maturity Model for Software (Version
1.1). Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering
Institute, 1993. - www.sei.cmu.edu/publications/documents/93.reports/
93.tr.024.html