A maturity model is a business tool used to assess people/culture, processes/structures, and objects/technology.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maturity_model
Contents:
- Maturity model levels
- Maturity model examples
- Maturity model process perspectives
- Top-down vs. bottom-up
- Modeling Maturing Levels
- Rebuttals to maturity models
- Related assessment metrics
- FAQ
- Can I create a maturity model?
- Who decides what goes into a maturity model?
- Is a maturity model a snapshot in time or a future plan?
- Is a maturity model descriptive or prescriptive?
- Can a maturity model evolve over time?
- Does a maturity model have an end state?
- Is a maturity model different than a scientific model?
- Is a maturity models verifiable?
Maturity model levels are typically a series of steps of sophistication such as:
- Level 0: Not Applicable
- Level 1: Initiate
- Level 2: Develop
- Level 3: Standardize
- Level 4: Manage
- Level 5: Orchestrate
Maturity model levels have a range of terminology in various industries such as:
- Level 0: None, Never, Negligible, Not Applicable.
- Level 1: Initiate, Investigate, Implicit, Individual-oriented, Informal-usage.
- Level 2: Develop, Describe, Duplicate, Direct-oriented, Department-usage.
- Level 3: Standardize, Specify, Scale, Service-oriented, Segment-usage
- Level 4: Manage, Measure, Mainstream, Mission-oriented, Mass-usage.
- Level 5: Orchestrate, Originate, Ongoing, Opportunity-oriented, Outsize-usage
We welcome examples of maturity models. If you know of a maturity model, please let us know by by creating a GitHub issue and/or a pull request.
General maturity models:
Topic maturity models:
- Agile
- Capability
- Continous Improvement
- Continuous Delivery
- Data Center
- Enterprise Architecture
- EIM : Enterprise Information Management
- Green Software
- IAM: Identity and Access Management
- Infrastructure as Code (IaC)
- IT: Information Technology
- Management
- Open Source
- Product
- PS: Professional Services
- Skills
- Six Sigma
- Social Media
- Software Documenation
- Team
- Vendors
P3M3® describes process perspectives. These can be assessed at all maturity model levels.
- Control Management: how well the organization maintains control of the initiatives currently ‘in flight’.
- Benefits Management: how well the organization defines, tracks and ensures achievement of performance improvement from the investment.
- Financial Management: how well the organization manages and controls the investment through business cases and budgetary control.
- Stakeholder Management: how well the initiatives engage with and communicate with the external environment to minimize the negative implications engagement can achieve.
- Organizational Governance: how well the organization controls the initiation and alignment of its investments with the corporate strategy.
- Risk Management: how well the organization focuses on and mitigates the impact of threats and the leveraging of opportunities.
- Resource Management: how well the organization develops its own talent and utilizes the opportunities from the supply chain to overcome peaks and troughs.
Two approaches for designing maturity models exist:
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Top-down approach: a fixed number of maturity stages or levels is specified first, then corroborated with characteristics (typically in form of specific assessment items) that support the initial assumptions about how maturity evolves.
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Bottom-up approach: distinct characteristics or assessment items are determined first, then clustered in a second step into maturity levels to induce a more general view of the different steps of maturity evolution.
Modeling Maturity Levels is a classification system defined by Anneke Kleppe and Jos Warmer in their book MDA Explained Addison-Wesley. The levels characterize the role of modeling in a software project. The concept shows resemblance to the way software processes are rated with the Capability Maturity Model.
See:
There are 6 levels:
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Level 0: No Specification: the specification of software is not written down. It is kept in the minds of the developers
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Level 1: Textual Specification: the software is specified by a natural language text (be it English or Chinese or something else), written down in one or more documents
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Level 2: Text with Models: a textual specification is enhanced with several models to show some of the main structures of the system
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Level 3: Models with Text: the specification of software is written down in one or more models. In addition to these models, natural language text is used to explain details, the background, and the motivation of the models, but the core of the specifications lies in the models.
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Level 4: Precise Models: the specification of the software is written down in one or more models. Natural language can still be used to explain the background and motivation of the models, but it takes on the same role as comments in source code.
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Level 5: Models only: the models are precise and detailed enough to allow complete code generation. The code generators at this level have become as trustworthy as compilers, therefore no developer needs to even look at the generated code.
- Immaturity of Maturity Models by James Bach
- Maturity Models Have It Backwards by Michael Bolton
- No Best Practices by James Bach
- The Immaturity of CMM
- Why Maturity Models Don’t Work by Barry O'Reilly
Yes. Anyone can create a maturity model. For example, many organizations create their own maturity models, sometimes based on public maturity models, sometimes making use of internal confidential information, sometimes in consultation with experts and advisors. and so forth. This repository links to many maturity models that are created by many people and many organizations.
The team that creates the maturity model decides what goes into it. For creating your own maturity models, we suggest using a "decision record" that can help your team research what you want to go in, and document your choices, in order to help other people understand and leverage your work.
Snapshot. Good teams will leverage the snapshot in order to create future plans, such as plans to work toward a higher maturity model level.
Descriptive. A maturity model describes the levels and their items, and does not prescribe how a team moves from one level to the next, or acquires items. In rare cases, a specific maturity model may provide adjuct advice, yet this is inherent to the maturity model.
Yes. As an organization evolves, each of its maturity models can evolve. For example, some organizations like to look ove each of their maturity models, each year, to ensure that each maturity model is still useful, and also to update each model as desired, based n the organization's goals and capabilities.
Yes. Then end state of a maturity model is when it is no longer useful to a team. For example, this can happen when a team decides that its current capabilties are fine as is, or when a team outgrows a maturity model by acheiving its highest level then wanting to improve even more.
Yes. A maturity model is intended to be a quick easy summary in order to help a team communicate about its current capabilties, and plan for future capabilties. The word "model" has the meaning "a small thing that represents another thing, that is often larger, or more complex, or more abstract." For comparison a "scientific model" is intended to explain and predict the behaviour of a real object or system, such as a visualization model that can contextualize a scientific object, or a predictive model that can foreccast a scientific system.
Yes. A maturity model can describe its levels and items in terms of qualitative metrics and/or quantitative metrics. For example, a programmer can describe Level 1 "Initiate" in terms of "Write a program that prints Hello World", up to Level 5 "Orchestrate" in terms of "Run a worldwide distributed system in concert with our key partners".