An Analysis of the Factors That Correlate with Transition Outcomes of Commercial Technology Prototype Projects
Abstract
A key metric of success for Department of Defense (DoD) Research and Development organizations is the ability to transition technologies and prototypes. Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering's prototyping guide shows successful transition pathways come in the forms of transition to operational use, rapid fielding, existing program adoption, or a new acquisition program (2018). There are many factors that occur throughout a prototype projects lifecycle that impact the likelihood of transition. These factors include both qualitative and quantitative factors. Limited research has been performed, past the best practice considerations, of what factors impact transition of prototyping efforts. This research evaluates commercial technology prototyping projects to identify the project characteristics and factors that correlate with transition success. The research setting is DoDs commercial product prototyping organization, the Defense Innovation Unit. The findings show that beyond technology success, the resources of time and money, stakeholder commitment and consistency, project execution and transition market factors correlate with transition success.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Sep 01, 2020
- Accession Number
- AD1114236
Entities
People
- Matthew D. Schoemaker
Organizations
- Air Force Institute of Technology