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Product Lifecycle Management (PLM), as shown here, defines three gateways:

  • Start Development Gate, which is the starting point for the product and allocates necessary resources to convert the initial concepts and designs into a working product, and to develop it
  • Enter Production Gate, which is the core gate in the process, which allows for operationalizing the product and developing services based on it
  • End of Life Gate, which allows for retiring the product by decommissioning all services that rely on it.

Below, we summarize the proposed assignment of Common Best Practices to facilitate passing specific gates:

Start Development Gate

ItemGuidancePractices
Problem statement and objectivesA clear description of the nature of the problem or opportunity the product/service is trying to address and the objectives of the project in addressing it.
UsersWho are the users of this service?
Benefits

What are the benefits for the user in using the service? Why would a user use the service?

N/A - business-oriented
Service descriptionA functional description of what the service is.
Market analysisDefine how the proposed product/service differs from other offerings that are available (if any).N/A - business-oriented
CostsA specification of costs.  Depending on the scale and cost of the development, a detailed business case estimation of the costs and (if applicable) revenues should be produced based on the available template.N/A - non-software-related management
FundingThe project should demonstrate that funding is available to cover the foreseen costs or estimate any additional funding required.N/A - non-software-related management
RoadmapA high-level roadmap showing the key functional and non-functional developments during the project.ADD
PlanningA plan showing the overall timescale with effort requirements and milestones for the whole project. ADD
ResourcesThe necessary resources should have been identified and be available to allow development to begin.  ​​​​​​​

Enter Production Gate

ItemGuidancePractices
Service definitionThis point covers documentation across the development: everything from marketing materials, service descriptions and operational support arrangements.N/A
Code quality

Security and quality code audits must be successfully completed (e.g., specialist software support resources) in order for a service/product to qualify for production.

Marketing and visibilityThis includes marketing content and a plan to promote the new service to increase uptake and explain how marketing activities will help in this increase. Also, investigate ways to make it easier for potential users to test or trial your service.
Service policyWho can use the service and what, if any, are the costs? This could involve governance outside of the PMO, e.g., the Cost Sharing Committee.N/A
IPRA check of the code to estimate any risks if a public release is planned.
GDPREven a website needs a privacy statement, further work is required if the service requires personal information.ADD
Operational support

This point covers items such as:

  • Operational team training
  • Documentation
  • Operational deployment
RoadmapIs there a roadmap for the next 12 months?ADD?
KPIsWhat key performance indicators have been defined, and what are their expected values for which period of time (for example service uptake)? For software-only services include how you plan to measure usage.ADD?

End of Life Gate

ItemGuidancePractices
User uptake

Are the number of users of the offering flat or declining? What are the likely future trends?


MarketlLandscapeHas the market landscape changed such that the offering has less relevance? Has new regulation been introduced that the offering now needs to comply with?
CompetitorsAre there similar offerings that are gaining popularity at the expense of this offering?
Business modelIs the business model still sustainable? Would the continued operation result in unacceptable costs and could those costs be better applied elsewhere?
Financial impactAre there any financial or strategic impacts of discontinuing the offering? The contracts should be reviewed to verify if there is any financial liability for withdrawing the offering. In addition, the user base should be reviewed for strategic impact. Are any other offerings dependent on this?
User impactHow many parties will be impacted by discontinuing the offering? Consider which internal groups, third parties, or users will be affected.
AlternativesConsider if there are alternatives to the EoL. For example, handing over the offering to a third party to operate, or to key beneficiaries.
SupportWhat is the current support burden for the offering? Can this be sustained?
TechnicalAre there technical risks in continuing to provide the offering? Is there third-party technology that is used by the offering that is being phased out or no longer available?
EoL timelineHas an announcement plan for users been defined? Define any steps in the EoL plan that need to be communicated, e.g., warning, final orders, final maintenance, and end of support.


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