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BS EN 9320:2014 Aerospace series. Programme Management. General guidelines for acquisition and supply of open systems, 2014
- Contents Page
- Foreword
- 1 Scope
- 2 Normative references
- 3 Terms and definitions and abbreviated terms [Go to Page]
- 3.1 Terms and definitions
- 3.2 List of abbreviations
- 4 Acquisition process [Go to Page]
- 4.1 An acquisition strategy is established [Go to Page]
- 4.1.1 Define an openness strategy
- 4.1.2 Define an acquisition strategy
- 4.2 A supplier is selected and the selection justified [Go to Page]
- 4.2.1 Define selection criteria
- 4.2.2 Justify the choice of supplier
- 4.3 Communication with the supplier is maintained
- 4.4 A contract is drawn up [Go to Page]
- 4.4.1 State the acceptance criteria for openness
- 4.4.2 Stipulate the legal conditions
- 4.4.3 Define the means for checking openness characteristics
- 4.5 A product or service conforming to the contract terms is accepted
- 4.6 The contract is closed
- 5 Supply process [Go to Page]
- 5.1 A buyer or a market for a product/service is identified and a proposal made
- 5.2 A contract is drawn up and communication maintained
- 5.3 A product or service conforming to the contract terms is provided
- 5.4 Ownership is transferred to the client
- 5.5 The contract is closed
- 6 Life cycle model management process [Go to Page]
- 6.1 The strategy and the processes required for managing the life cycle model are defined
- 7 Infrastructure management process
- 8 Budget management process [Go to Page]
- 8.1 The opportunities, investments or requirements of the investment plan are defined, prioritised and selected
- 8.2 Resources and budgets are identified and allocated for each project
- 9 Resource management process [Go to Page]
- 9.1 The core skills required by the projects are identified
- 9.2 The necessary human resources are provided for the projects
- 9.3 Staff core skills are developed, maintained or enhanced
- 9.4 Conflicts in multi-project resource demands are resolved
- 9.5 Individual knowledge, information and core skills are pooled, shared, reused and improved throughout the organisation
- 10 Quality management process
- 11 Project planning process [Go to Page]
- 11.1 The project plan is available
- 11.2 Stakeholders, responsibilities and authorities are identified
- 11.3 The resources and services required for project completion are formally requested
- 12 Project control and assessment process
- 13 Decision-making process
- 14 Risk management process [Go to Page]
- 14.1 The scope of risk management is determined
- 14.2 Appropriate risk and opportunity management strategies are defined and implemented
- 14.3 Risks and opportunities are identified as soon as they emerge, managed until a conclusion is reached and funded
- 14.4 Risks and opportunities are analysed and their priority (for allocation of resources) is determined
- 14.5 Risk management/opportunity exploitation measures are defined, implemented and evaluated to determine changes in the risk/opportunity status and the progress of activities to deal with them
- 14.6 The appropriate action is taken to integrate the opportunity into the project
- 15 Configuration management process [Go to Page]
- 15.1 A configuration management strategy is defined
- 15.2 Define a configuration management strategy
- 15.3 The items requiring configuration management are defined
- 15.4 Configuration references are established
- 15.5 The configuration of configuration items is managed
- 15.6 The status of configuration items is available throughout the life cycle
- 16 Information management process [Go to Page]
- 16.1 The information to be managed is identified
- 16.2 Information formalism is defined
- 16.3 Information is modified to suit requirements
- 16.4 Information is kept available
- 16.5 Information is up-to-date, complete and valid
- 16.6 Information is made available to the designated parties
- 16.7 Information is made available to the designated parties whenever changes are made
- 17 Measuring process [Go to Page]
- 17.1 Information requirements for the technical and management processes are identified
- 17.2 An appropriate set of assessment measurements, based on information requirements, is identified and/or developed.
- 17.3 Assessment activities are identified and planned
- 17.4 The required data is compiled, stored, analysed and the results interpreted
- 17.5 Information products are used to uphold decisions and provide an objective basis for communication
- 17.6 The measuring process and the measurements are evaluated
- 17.7 Improvements are communicated to measuring process managers
- 17.8 Appendix: ATAM (“Method for Architecture Evaluation”)
- 18 Requirement establishment and analysis process [Go to Page]
- 18.1 Establishment of stakeholder requirements [Go to Page]
- 18.1.1 Define the requirement
- 18.1.2 Identify the stakeholders
- 18.1.3 Identify the requirements and constraints of the openness
- 18.2 Definition of stakeholder requirements [Go to Page]
- 18.2.1 Establish usage scenarios
- 18.2.2 Characterise the operational flows and list the interfaces of the target system
- 18.2.3 Characterise the interfaces and define the openness requirements for the interfaces
- 18.2.4 Highlight the services that the system must provide
- 18.2.5 Define the functions that the system must carry out
- 18.2.6 Define the requirements that may restrict architectural choices
- 18.2.7 Identify the openness characteristics associated with the MMI
- 18.2.8 Define the requirements which have inevitable consequences for contracts and technical or project decisions
- 18.2.9 Formulate the Manufacturing, Integration and Transition requirements specific to the openness
- 18.2.10 Formulate Verification and Validation requirements
- 18.2.11 Prepare the information to be provided with regard to the operational openness requirement in the various documents at the beginning of the design phase
- 18.3 Analysis of stakeholder requirements [Go to Page]
- 18.3.1 Analyse all requirements obtained
- 18.3.2 Select the critical requirements with regard to openness
- 18.3.3 Validate the specification of requirements with the stakeholders
- 18.3.4 Trace the requirements in a way appropriate to management of requirements
- 18.4 Requirement monitoring throughout the system life cycle [Go to Page]
- 18.4.1 Continue monitoring requirements during the whole life cycle of the system
- 19 Architecture design process [Go to Page]
- 19.1 Describe and model prospective architectures
- 19.2 Define, document and manage the architectures, mainly the interfaces, of the system
- 19.3 Compare the prospective architectures and select the one that best meets the requirement and the openness criteria
- 19.4 Check and validate the openness characteristics of the architecture and certify the interfaces
- 20 Execution process
- 21 Integration process [Go to Page]
- 21.1 Establish an integration strategy
- 21.2 Define the design constraints resulting from the integration
- 22 Verification process [Go to Page]
- 22.1 Establish a verification strategy
- 22.2 Define the design constraints so the system can be verified
- 22.3 Check the openness characteristics
- 22.4 Identify and correct non-conformities
- 23 Validation process [Go to Page]
- 23.1 Establish a validation strategy
- 23.2 Define the constraints resulting from validation
- 23.3 Validate the openness characteristics
- 23.4 Identify and correct nonconformities
- 24 Qualification process
- 25 Operating process [Go to Page]
- 25.1 Prepare a strategy for operation
- 25.2 Monitor the level of openness of the system throughout its operating cycle
- 26 Maintenance process
- 27 Withdrawal from service process
- Bibliography [Go to Page]