SMC-S-001 (2010), AFSC STANDARD: SYSTEMS ENGINEERING REQUIREMENTS AND PRODUCTS (12-JUL-2010)
SMC-S-001 (2010), AFSC STANDARD: SYSTEMS ENGINEERING REQUIREMENTS AND PRODUCTS (12-JUL-2010)., This standard defines the government’s requirements for a disciplined systems engineering approach to system acquisitions. It specifies the government’s requirements for executable contractor systems
engineering efforts, and can also be used as a guide by the tasking agency/activity to assist in systems
engineering planning and management. Government agencies (Department of Defense and the
Intelligence Community) should use this document as a compliance document for system acquisition
contracts. It is also applicable to non-DOD government (NASA and others), civil, and commercial
developments.
This document’s objective is to define the minimum essential work products, produced in the systems
engineering process, needed to:
Adequately define a system over its life cycle such that the integrated system when deployed:
a. Provides at least the threshold or minimum required capabilities and requirements
and is affordable, but otherwise balances capability, cost, schedule, risk, and the
potential for evolutionary growth
b. Is defined by operations concepts, operational capabilities/requirements, system
architectures, specifications, drawings, technical orders, training documents,
maintenance facilities and equipment documents, test plans and procedures
c. Includes the documented processes that are essential to build-to, buy-to, code-to,
verify-to, deploy-to train-to, operate-to, support/sustain-to, and dispose-to over the
system life-cycle
d. Has system definition products satisfying this objective, referred to as the system
configuration baseline
Define products that can be used throughout the intermediate development stages by the tasking
and performing activities to plan, monitor, and control the progress over each phase and contract
of the system acquisition program.