CMMI Institute

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Products

CMMI® Institute offers market-driven solutions that provide insights for baselining and optimizing your key organizational capabilities, cybermaturity, and data assets to elevate your business performance.

Learning

Learning

CMMI® training courses provide guidance for efficient, effective improvement across multiple process disciplines in an organization. Whether you are just getting started with CMMI or have decades of experience, our training courses will move you along your career path.

Resources

Resources

The CMMI Resource Center is a collection of every digital resource in one place. Browse through our collection of presentations, webinars, articles, case studies, and whitepapers to answer all your CMMI questions.

News

News

Read the latest news, press releases and industry perspectives from CMMI.

Capability Counts 2018

Speaker Profile

Nathan Cline, Embedded Software Engineer

Northrop Grumman Corporation

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About

Nathan Cline is an Embedded Software Engineer at the Northrop Grumman, Annapolis campus. He has received numerous company awards for both technical achievements and process improvements since joining the company in June 2015. Nathan graduated Summa Cum Laude from the University of Maryland Baltimore County with a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and from the University of California at Irvine with a Certificate in Project Management. He is currently pursuing a Master of Science in Systems Engineering at the University of Maryland Baltimore County.

SPEAKER PRESENTATION

The "Cost" of Software Process

Conference Track: Business Results Through CMMI

Many modern day proposals and contracts are structured around a specific Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) level which serves to guide design, implementation, and process improvement. As the CMMI level increases, so too does the quality of the product and subsequently the performance of the organization. However, many teams largely dismiss submitting proposals meeting or exceeding these CMMI levels due to the supposed minimal return on investment. To counter this presumption, I have collected quantitative results via analysis of SEER-SEM models from a variety of program sizes and areas which show a decrease in software effort of up to 25% by operating at CMMI level 3 or higher.