portfolio analysis and management for intelligence information dissemination programs /
Eric Landree [and others]
Santa Monica, CA :
RAND,
2009
1 online resource (xx, 44 pages) :
color illustrations
Includes bibliographical references (pages 43-44)
Introduction: the basics of portfolio management -- The RAND PortMan method -- PortMan evaluation of the NSA ISS portfolio -- Conclusions
0
This publication describes the application of the RAND Corporation's Portfolio Analysis and Management Method (PortMan) to the evaluation of the National Security Agency's (NSA) information dissemination program portfolio, which is managed by the NSA Information Sharing Services (ISS) division. RAND's PortMan method enables the data-driven analysis of project portfolios and provides a means to monitor the progress of potentially high-value projects. It also allows portfolio managers to monitor the impact of any mitigation strategies they undertake, ensuring that the portfolio's highest potential value is achieved. For this project, RAND researchers first employed the Delphi method, a process for eliciting group opinion by a series of questionnaires with selective feedback from earlier responses, to collect expert opinion from the ISS Senior Leadership Group. This allowed for an estimation of value and risk for each project. RAND then used these estimates, together with cost information provided by ISS, to develop project rankings and to estimate the expected value-to-cost ratio for each project. RAND selected portfolios of projects that maximized the total expected value for the available program budget using a linear programming method and compared these results to ISS management's funding priorities
JSTOR
OverDrive, Inc.
22573/cttgsxn
473BEB67-ED41-4745-9CFF-8746B967A973
Delicate balance.
9780833049094
United States.
Intelligence service-- United States
Intelligence service-- United States-- Management
Program budgeting
Project management
Landree, Eric
United States., National Security Agency/Central Security Service