5 CASE STUDY
The case study was applied on a large scale software
development unit. The organization owns offices in
more than 34 countries worldwide. According to the
information supplied by the organization, it has
more than 55 thousand employees all over the world.
The unit where the study was carried out is located
in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil.
There are more than 400 people working on projects
that meet the companies’ IT area in any region of the
world. The biggest interaction is with the
headquarters, located in Austin, Texas, USA, which
is responsible for the demand of projects. This
Brazil’s unit is certified on SW-CMM level 2
January/2003.
5.1 Organizational Level
Concerning this level of the model, the same brings
meaningful contributions setting the flows for usage
of the Balanced Scorecard. This level of the model
does the alignment of the program of quality with
the organization’s strategic objectives in a clear and
efficient way.
Through the case study it was noted that this
level of the method presents signs of possibility of
generalization, once that, the studied organization
does not uses the technique BSC. This basis the
performance indicators were mapped from the
Hoshin Plan, used by the organization to the BSC
proposed in the method. This mapping was done
through Strategic Objectives and Strategic Maps
documents. The sources of the data were the Hoshin
Plans of the IT, PMO and GPQT (Global Process,
Quality and Tools) areas of the studied organization.
5.2 Projects and Systems Level
The method adopts cycles well spread to the creation
of processes; this basis the application of this level
was easy and direct. But it was noted that the
method is not efficient when it comes to defining
execution roles to the creation of process’ life-
cycles. This facility however, does not mean that the
method can help in a practical way the organizations
which are commencing the definition of its own
processes’ framework once the studied organization
has already been working this way.
5.3 Continuous Improvement Level
Though the analysis flow of measures and indicators
the proposed method contributes straight with this
area. The organization which was object of studies
had all the information needed to this level, although
they were not well organized in a way that
everybody could have access. The improvement
projects, that use a specific program called BPI,
could be perfectly mapped to the proposed methods,
because they meet all Six Sigma requirements.
6 CONCLUSIONS
We can note that the integration between continuous
improvement initiatives used in one organization can
help the implementation of a quality program. The
different efforts that arise with the objective to
improve products, processes e services quality need
to be connected. These actions need to have as a
main focus on the business process improvement of
each organization.
Along with BSC, software measures were the
quantitative part of the indicators, it means, what we
want to measure. Those measures will naturally be
aligned to the strategic objectives of the organization
once they will be created from performance
indicators’ definitions. This procedure eliminates
efforts to collect and work information that are not
import for the organization.
After it is given a definition to what type of
information it is considered important to the
organization it is necessary to define which process
will give origin to the data that will feed the
indicators.
Once this process is defined, the indicators will
give to the organization the possibility to realize and
choose improvement fields based on trustable
information. Using the methodology Six Sigma, it is
possible to make an analysis of the processes, work
the causes that affect them and control the process.
REFERENCES
Basili, V. R. The Goal Question Metric Approach.
Available at:
ftp://ftp.cs.umd.edu/pub/sel/papers/gqm.pdf
Chrissis, Mary Beth; Konrad, Mike; Shrum, Sandy.
CMMI Guidelines for Process Integration and Product
Improvement. Addison-Wesley, 2003, 664pp.
Goethert, Wolfhart; Fisher Matt. Deriving Enterprise-
Based Measures Using the Balance Scorecard and
Goal-Driven Measurement Techniques. Institute
Carnegie Mellon University. October 2003.
Kulpa, Mararet K. Interpreting the CMMI: a process
improvement approach. Estados Unidos: Auerbach,
2003, 1º Edição, 414 pp.
INTEGRATION METHOD AMONG BSC, CMMI AND SIX SIGMA USING GQM TO SUPPORT MEASUREMENT
DEFINITION (MIBCIS)
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