The IBM Engineering Lifecycle Management (ELM) portfolio helps you overcome the challenges and complications of compliance with automotive standards such as ASPICE
Perhaps no consumer product is more complex than today’s automobile. The combination of mechanical and electrical systems that have over 100 million lines of software code has essentially created a mobile, passenger-carrying computer. Such a complex system depends on the quality and reliability of every component, and on how these components are designed to interact with each other.
To respond to rising product complexity, the automotive industry has created robust safety and process standards. But your engineering organization may find these standards onerous if they’re not well supported by their engineering tools. One of these standards — ASPICE (Automotive Software Performance Improvement and Capability dEtermination) — is concerned with the quality of the development process.
Automotive manufacturers and suppliers throughout the world strive to increase levels of ASPICE compliance. Doing so enables them to achieve and prove that their development processes meet state-of-the-art engineering practices. To help clients achieve higher ASPICE levels more quickly, IBM has teamed up with ASPICE industry expert Kugler-Maag Cie to develop an integrated approach to support ASPICE compliance. The solution also greatly reduces the burden and overhead typically associated with ASPICE assessments.
Learn how IBM is helping customers achieve ASPICE at IoT Exchange in Orlando, FL March 17-18
Insightful engineering at enterprise scale
The IBM Engineering Lifecycle Management portfolio provides tools to manage the end-to-end engineering lifecycle in a coordinated and scalable way. It automates both traditional waterfall and agile methodologies to streamline and simplify highly complex activities. These include requirements management, systems design, testing, and impact analysis. Real-time collaboration capabilities and full traceability across all your engineering artifacts help to break down organizational silos that otherwise would inhibit quality and efficiency.
ASPICE compliance is no longer an afterthought
A new addition to IBM Engineering Lifecycle Management (ELM) was released on December 13, 2019. The IBM Engineering Lifecycle Management Automotive Compliance solution introduces pre-defined assets for compliance and ASPICE. The comprehensive automotive systems and software engineering solution includes project dashboards, agile process guidance, and detailed reports. It helps remove the burden from engineering compliance teams to integrate ASPICE compliance within regular engineering work.
Starting with stakeholder requirements and moving through systems architecture, software design, and verification and validation, the IBM ELM Automotive Compliance solution offers a tremendous advantage for ASPICE assessments. Your teams – wherever they are – can perform their engineering tasks confident in the knowledge that they are following ASPICE compliant processes.
IBM ELM Automotive Compliance improves the entire automotive OEM and supplier ecosystem
For more than ten years, ASPICE compliance has been a crucial factor for automotive suppliers to win business. In 2015, the standard evolved and explicitly separated engineering process groups into system and software engineering processes. ASPICE thereby paved the way for compatible assessment process frameworks for mechanical and electrical processes as well. Today, automotive OEMs worldwide recognize the value of ASPICE to manage internal process quality and to assess suppliers. IBM’s ELM Automotive Compliance solution supports the entire OEM and supplier ecosystem by improving their engineering processes.
As clients mature in their use of this solution, they will leverage it to standardize development processes beyond just the project level and transform entire organizations. The reuse of project artifacts and processes becomes a reality. Strengths and weaknesses of development organizations are identified, and overall flexibility can be improved. That’s quite a feat. And some of the most innovative and successful OEMs and suppliers are already well down this path.
Learn more
As the automotive industry faces increasingly stringent compliance regulations, IBM’s total ELM solution goes beyond basic compliance. We combine IoT, AI, and analytics to provide an end-to-end, integrated development process with compliance guidance built right in. Next, we are looking at creating similar solutions with sophisticated and detailed guidance on topics like Functional Safety (ISO26262), Cyber Security (SAE/ISO21434) and Safety of The Intended Functionality (SOTIF). Stay tuned for more to come from IBM Engineering.
Talk to a compliance expert at IoT Exchange in Orlando | Read the joint paper from Kugler Maag Cie and IBM
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Hi Kate – thanks for your update. Is there any documentation available for review, or better yet, can the process templates for the Automotive Compliance Solution be applied to cloud trial system where I have an instance
Hi Hank- thank you so much for reaching out. I will follow up with you directly on email so that we can share more information with you. Thanks!
Think of the meaningful of ASPICE and we need ask this kind of question to ourselves. what is the purpose of the ASPICE? To improve the quality of development of process?Is it the essential purpose of us?Who can use one formula to explain the relationship between process quality and product quality in software field? We need this answer ! We real need it! Don’t deny that we just want earn money and hope a lot of people really want buy our products. We want create the product use less money and high customer satification.so doubtless ASPICE is not final target.Efficiency and effectiveness is the real answer.As we know ASPICE is a complex standard and hard to practice.Nobody want practice it with high cost. We must have this same understanding, if no suitable and smart tools or tool chain , ASPICE just some words in paper.
@Luyun Zhou, thank you for your comment. You bring up a number of multi-faceted questions. The lower levels of Automotive SPICE concern the _effectiveness_ of a process / the ability of a development department to achieve the required outcomes. IBM saw that many customers struggled with similar issues. This new offering helps them to achieve the required effectiveness as _efficiently_ as possible.
Under the influence of many leading automotive companies, IBM evolved to a very suitable tool chain for the automotive industry and thus also for Automotive SPICE requirements. The new Automotive Compliance offering demonstrates how to use IBM ELM – not just on paper, but with actual deployable assets.
[…] In December 2019, the first version of ELM Automotive Compliance (ELM AC) was released. ELM AC is a new offering that consists of agile process content structured according Automotive SPICE process groups, templates and reports. The offering allows automotive customers to streamline their usage of IBM ELM for automotive industry standards. Customers who don’t want to rely on an agile process can still benefit from the offering by using the templates and mapping of tool functionality according to their own process. Together with the release of IBM ELM 7.0.1, ELM AC releases the first update with version number 1.0.1. […]