How CMMI Improves Performance and Prepares Businesses to Compete for Government Contracts – Complimentary Webinar
Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) can open up a world of new customers to you and can improve your efficiencies. But before making an investment in CMMI, we encourage you to listen to our 1-hour Webinar to find if CMMI is right for your organization.
This webinar is ideal for companies who plan to pursue small business government contracts. Government agencies are increasingly mandating CMMI certification for many of its contracts. Learn how SSCI has cost-effectively helped your competitors prepare for this new requirement.
There is no cost for this opportunity.
What is CMMI?
CMMI is a process improvement approach that provides organizations with the essential elements of effective discipline-specific processes that improve performance. A CMMI rating is necessary for most Government contracts.
Benefits of CMMI
CMMI can be used to guide process improvement across a project, a program, a division, or an entire organization. It helps integrate traditionally separate organizational functions, establish process improvement goals and priorities, provide guidance for quality processes, and provide a point of reference for measuring current performance against industry best practices.
About the Webinar
This Webinar is designed for all levels of executive, technical, and program leadership. This online overview presents the critical aspects of CMMI and related information necessary to decide if CMMI is an appropriate improvement path. Additionally, sufficient details are presented to begin to plan a CMMI-based improvement initiative.
Presenter: Michael S. Evanoo, Certified High Maturity Lead Appraiser for CMMI, Certified Instructor for Introduction to CMMI, Certified Scrum Master, Six Sigma Black Belt, Principal Member Technical Staff, Systems and Software Consortium, Reston, VA
Sponsors: Systems and Software Consortium, Reston, VA.
For more information regarding CMMI, please contact us at ask_ssci@systemsandsoftware.org.
Posted by Pat Robinson at 02/25/2010 03:11:19 PM