Title: Exploration Systems RFI 04-01: Methodology and Results
1Exploration Systems RFI 04-01Methodology and
Results
2RFI Evaluation Process Phase I Scoring
STEP 1 Contractors submit white papers in three
categories (responses due NLT 5/20)
Design Principles, Objectives, and Guidelines
Crosscutting Design Drivers/ Architecture Elements
Program Management, Acquisition, and Interfaces
STEP 2 Eval teams utilize web-based document
review tool in OExS Product Data Management
system to assign scores and WBS/tech tags as file
attributes (5/20-31)
HRT Evaluation Team 1 (60 Heads)
HRT Evaluation Team 2 (60 Heads)
Constellation Evaluation Team (10 Heads)
Scoring Criteria
STEP 3 Scored RFI responses are passed to teams
in Requirements, Human Robotic Technology, and
Constellation for use in program content and
management definition
Demonstrated Effectiveness / Technical
Maturity 1- 5
Innovativeness / Variation from Historical
Approach 1- 5
Potential Improvement in Schedule, Cost,
Risk 1- 5
RFI Review Period May 20 31
3RFI Evaluation Process Phase I Focus Area Mapping
Results are mapped into RFI Focus Areas to
facilitate retrieval and use for subsequent BAAs
and RFPs
4RFI Evaluation Process Phase I WBS Mapping
Results are mapped to WBS Tier 1 to
facilitate retrieval and use for subsequent BAAs
and RFPs
5RFI Evaluation Process Phase I Tech Tagging
RFI responses are tagged for relevance to certain
technology types to facilitate retrieval and use
for subsequent BAAs and RFPs
6Web-Based Evaluation System Process Map
STEP 1 Login to the RFI Portal
STEP 2 Get your Review Task
STEP 3 Complete your Evaluation
- Original RFI submission page
- Download document
- Review document
Task a
Task b
- Create RFI Review Document
- Fill out evaluation criteria
Email notification
Review Task Page
START
Login
Review Completed Evaluation
Task c
RFI Portal WWW Browser https//naccsli3.nis.nasa.
gov
Work-list
START
Login
Task d
Perform Task Complete
- An evaluator can use either path (
or ) to complete an evaluation - Click on the any of the above process blocks or
arrows to see details - At anytime you can get to your Review Task
through your work-list
START
START
Map
Home
FAQs
7Scoring CriteriaDemonstrated Effectiveness /
Technological Maturity
- SCORE OF 1 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that comply with the
basic principles of physics, systems integration,
or program management, but that have not been
fully formulated. - SCORE OF 2 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
formulated through analytical or experimental
proof-of-concept, but that have not been
validated in a relevant environment or
small-scale project. - SCORE OF 3 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
validated in a relevant environment or
small-scale project, but have not been
demonstrated in full prototype form or in the
development phase of a major program. - SCORE OF 4 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
demonstrated in full prototype form or in the
development phase of a major program, but have
not been carried through the full life cycle of a
development program or mission operations. - SCORE OF 5 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
successfully carried through the full life cycle
of a development program and/or mission
operations.
8Scoring CriteriaInnovativeness / Variation from
Historical Approach
- SCORE OF 1 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
broadly employed in previous development
programs, that met the baseline requirements of
these programs, but did not substantially improve
functional performance or state-of-the-art. - SCORE OF 2 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
broadly employed in previous development programs
with the effect of substantially exceeding
baseline requirements and/or substantially
improving functional performance or
state-of-the-art. - SCORE OF 3 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
employed occasionally in previous development
programs with the effect of substantially
exceeding baseline requirements and/or
substantially improving functional performance or
state-of-the-art. Though they proved to be
useful assets to the programs that employed them,
these concepts, technologies, or approaches have
not been infused into a broad number or diversity
of programs. - SCORE OF 4 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
previously proposed for infusion into development
programs. These concepts, technologies, or
approaches would potentially alter functional
performance or state-of-the-art to the extent
that they would fundamentally alter previously
conducted system-wide trades in development
programs. These concepts, technologies, or
approaches may have advocates in the development
community, but are not broadly known or accepted.
Alternatively, the paper may propose the
utilization of concepts, technologies, or
approaches that have not been previously
considered for their potential contributions to
the capabilities of space systems. - SCORE OF 5 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have not been
previously proposed. These concepts,
technologies, or approaches would potentially
alter functional performance or state-of-the-art
to the extent that they would fundamentally alter
system-wide trades in development programs.
Alternatively, the paper may propose concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have not been
considered as potential elements of a space
system or space exploration architecture, and
that might revolutionize the capabilities of
developed systems.
9Scoring CriteriaPotential Improvement in Cost,
Schedule, Risk
- SCORE OF 1 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
employed in the past and that caused programs to
fail to meet baseline targets for cost, schedule,
and/or risk. Alternatively, the concepts,
technologies, or approaches advocated by this
paper have not been previously employed but
present unjustifiable threats to a program that
would be run within cost, schedule, and/or risk
constraints. - SCORE OF 2 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that have been
employed in the past and that posed substantial
threats to baseline targets for cost, schedule,
and/or risk. If not previously employed, the
concepts, technologies, or approaches advocated
by this paper would force programs to accept
substantial threats to cost, schedule, and/or
risk baselines. - SCORE OF 3 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that helped enable
previous programs to meet baseline targets for
cost, schedule, and/or risk. If not previously
employed, the concepts, technologies, or
approaches advocated by this paper would have a
neutral effect on the cost, schedule, and/or risk
baselines of programs exhibiting conventional
analogs of the concepts, technologies, or
approaches. - SCORE OF 4 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that allowed previous
programs to positively exceed baseline targets
for cost, schedule, and/or risk. If not
previously employed, the concepts, technologies,
or approaches advocated by this paper have a high
probability of substantially improving the cost,
schedule, and/or risk performance of programs
employing conventional analogs. - SCORE OF 5 This paper identifies concepts,
technologies, or approaches that would reduce the
cost, schedule, and/or risk of developing a
system so much that the total system-of-systems
or proposed acquisition strategy would be
fundamentally improved or accelerated.
10RFI Results Summary Observations
- Wealth of great material will be available in
database. - Comprehensive trade studies or architectural
concepts - Articulations of difficult lessons learned in
prior NASA programs - Engineering data management process and IT a
major focus. - Some of these included collaboration tools
- Others extended this to modeling and simulation
- A recurring theme was the strong recommendation
to consider and demonstrate technology X early in
the lifecycle. - Examples of X included EVA suits, autonomous
robotics, vehicle health management, simulation
infrastructure, software development tools, and
many others - It was difficult for many respondents to treat
this as an RFI, not an RFP. Many respondents
submitted what amounted to proposals to commence
or resume technical studies or development
programs. - Many submissions were recycled technical reports.
Though content did not respond directly to the
RFI focus areas, many were relevant.
11RFI Results High Score Distribution
12RFI Results Design Principles Distribution
13RFI Results Cross-Cutting Drivers Distribution
14RFI Results Program Management Distribution
15RFI Results WBS Distribution
Systems Engineering Integration tagged for
gt50 of Evaluated Submissions
16Phase I Feedback to RFI Submitters
Notification of Evaluation Online evaluation
database will automatically notify submitter when
RFI submission has been fully evaluated.
Results Analysis Posting Team of Headquarters
managers will query database to (1) identify
exceptional proposals for concepts, technologies,
or approaches (2) review metadata that describes
total complement of submissions (3) probe
certain clusters of papers based on mapping to
WBS, focus areas, technology types, and scoring
criteria. A document describing the results of
this analysis will be posted to the Exploration
Systems Acquisition Information website by June
15.
Briefing of Results Analysis at Industry Day RFI
Evaluation Process managers will brief results
analysis at NASA Headquarters Industry Day, to be
held on June 18.
17WBS Relevance Mapping Phase II Utilization
RFI responses are passed to teams in
Requirements, Human Robotic Technology, and
Constellation for use in program content
formulation and management definition
Requirements Formulation and Architecture
Definition Activities
HRT BAA/NRA System-of-Systems Challenges
Constellation Program Structure Management,
Acquisition Strategy, CEV RFP
BAA Concept Exploration Refinement
HRT BAA/NRA Technology Gap Filling