9 9 th th Command & Control Research & Technology Symposium Command & Control Research & Technology Symposium San Diego, CA June 15 San Diego, CA June 15 - - 17, 2004 17, 2004 www.echelon4.com Slide 1 Jay Bayne, PhD Jay Bayne, PhD Echelon 4 Corporation Echelon 4 Corporation [email protected][email protected]An Engineering Model An Engineering Model for for Enterprise Command and Control Enterprise Command and Control Raymond Paul, PhD Raymond Paul, PhD OASD/NII OASD/NII [email protected][email protected]
18
Embed
An Engineering Model for Enterprise Command and … Process 4. EC2 Characteristics 5. EC2 Objective: Value Production 6. ... Plans of Record (POR) 10. EC2 Application 11. EC2 Collaboration
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 1
Jay Bayne, PhDJay Bayne, PhDEchelon 4 CorporationEchelon 4 [email protected]@echelon4.com
An Engineering ModelAn Engineering Modelfor for
Enterprise Command and ControlEnterprise Command and Control
Raymond Paul, PhDRaymond Paul, PhDOASD/NIIOASD/NII
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 2
OutlineOutline1. Definition of Enterprise C22. C2 Automation Evolution3. EC2 Process4. EC2 Characteristics5. EC2 Objective: Value Production6. Value Production Model7. EC2 Actor Model8. EC2 Context Model9. Plans of Record (POR)10. EC2 Application11. EC2 Collaboration12. EC2 “Bridge”13. Asset Chain Collaboration14. Supply Chain Collaboration15. Enterprise Performance Measures
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 3
Enterprise C2Enterprise C2
• Enterprise, n, an arbitrary unit of organization responsible for executing one or more policy constrained value propositionsvalue propositionswithin a given context
• Enterprise Command and Control (EC2), v, the interactive real-time act of measurement, situation assessment, planning, and plan execution required to guide an enterprise in achieving its value propositions all while immersed in an evolving context
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 4
Evolution of AutomationEvolution of Automation
• Are we ready to automate (engineer) the upper levels of large-scale enterprise?
• Can we apply integrated computing, communications and control technologies to traditionally social management practices?
• Are enterprise system models sufficiently robust to represent enterprise behaviors?
EC2 IssuesEC2 Issues
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 5
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 6
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 7
Key Objective Key Objective –– Value ProductionValue Production
• Supply Value Chain– Clients
• Demand In (di)• Supply Out (so)
– Servers• Demand Out (do)• Supply In (si)
• Asset Value Chain– Superiors
• Assets In (ai)• Returns Out (ro)
– Subordinates• Assets Out (ao)• Returns In (ri)
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 8
Value Production ModelValue Production Model
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 9
EC2 Actor ModelEC2 Actor Model
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 10
EC2 Context ModelEC2 Context Model
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 11
EC2 Plans of Record (POR)EC2 Plans of Record (POR)
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 12
EC2 ApplicationEC2 Application
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 13
Collaborative EC2Collaborative EC2
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 14
EC2 “Bridge”EC2 “Bridge”
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 15
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 16
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 17
Enterprise PerformanceEnterprise Performance
• Potential– What a process is potentially
capable of doing• Capability
– What a process is “resourced” to do
• Actuality– What a process is actually
doing• Latency
– Ratio of Capability to Potential• Productivity
– Ratio of Actuality to Capability• Performance
– Ratio of Actuality to Potential
99thth Command & Control Research & Technology SymposiumCommand & Control Research & Technology SymposiumSan Diego, CA June 15San Diego, CA June 15--17, 200417, 2004www.echelon4.com Slide 18