Product (glossary): Difference between revisions

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''<blockquote>A system considered from the point of view of a physical “system end product” (ANSI/EIA 2003) made of system elements that may include hardware, software, infrastructure and support services. The people and organizational aspects of the “whole system” of which the “product system” forms a part have to be considered in the design, but are provided by another organization. (BKCASE Author Team, INCOSE UK Chapter Capability Working Group, both 2010)</blockquote>''
<blockquote>(1) ''A system considered from the point of view of a physical “system end product” (ANSI/EIA 2003) made of system elements that may include hardware, software, infrastructure and support services. The people and organizational aspects of the “whole system” of which the “product system” forms a part have to be considered in the design, but are provided by another organization. ''(INCOSE UK Chapter 2010)</blockquote>


====Source====
<blockquote>(2) ''An artifact that is produced, is quantifiable, and can be either an end item in itself or a component item.''  (PMI 2008)</blockquote>
This definition was developed for the SEBoK version 0.5. ‘’Note to reviewers’’:  If you are aware of a more authoritative definition, please provide this information in your review.
 
===Source===
(1) INCOSE UK Chapter. 2010. ''Applying Systems Engineering to In-Service Systems: Supplementary Guidance to the INCOSE Systems Engineering Handbook''. Version 3.2, issue 1.0. Foresgate, UK: International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE) UK Chapter: 10, 13, 23.
 
(2) PMI. 2008. ''A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide)'', 4th ed. Newtown Square, PA, USA: Project Management Institute (PMI).


===Discussion===
===Discussion===
Discussion as to why this is the "consensus" definition for the SEBoK.
This definition is a systems engineering definition, which is consistent with the concept of a system-of-interest (SoI) focused on the product system to be delivered to an acquirer who will use it to help deliver user outcomes.


[[Category:Glossary of Terms]]
[[Category:Glossary of Terms]]
<center>'''SEBoK v. 2.12, released 27 May 2025'''</center>

Latest revision as of 00:26, 24 May 2025

(1) A system considered from the point of view of a physical “system end product” (ANSI/EIA 2003) made of system elements that may include hardware, software, infrastructure and support services. The people and organizational aspects of the “whole system” of which the “product system” forms a part have to be considered in the design, but are provided by another organization. (INCOSE UK Chapter 2010)

(2) An artifact that is produced, is quantifiable, and can be either an end item in itself or a component item. (PMI 2008)

Source

(1) INCOSE UK Chapter. 2010. Applying Systems Engineering to In-Service Systems: Supplementary Guidance to the INCOSE Systems Engineering Handbook. Version 3.2, issue 1.0. Foresgate, UK: International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE) UK Chapter: 10, 13, 23.

(2) PMI. 2008. A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), 4th ed. Newtown Square, PA, USA: Project Management Institute (PMI).

Discussion

This definition is a systems engineering definition, which is consistent with the concept of a system-of-interest (SoI) focused on the product system to be delivered to an acquirer who will use it to help deliver user outcomes.

SEBoK v. 2.12, released 27 May 2025