Ask HN: Project Management at a Military Operation?

3 points by mib32 ↗ HN
To me it's obvious that the military operation is a project just like any other.

How are projects managed at war? Do they try to go Agile, or it's mostly waterfall? Please share you knowledge and experience.

6 comments

[ 5.6 ms ] story [ 22.9 ms ] thread
Closer to Agile, Waterfall implies a commitment to your early plans despite the reality of the situation once the action starts. Real world military projects are iterated on frequently and adapted once they hit the field (and reality).
Agile. You do a waterfall based plan at the beginning (the very formalized operations order) that cascades from the highest level all the way down to the squad level. Operations start and then you iterate.

Most important two sentences in the operations order is the mission and commanders intent: If all else fails, get this done. And this is why.

This leaves lots of room (and expectation) for iteration and innovation along the way as things inevitably get f'd up with a dynamic enemy.

Periodically, you will refresh the opord and start the iteration again. This is practiced ALL the time by combat units at every level through simulations and on the ground training.

Source: was an infantry officer.

Looks very intriguing. I think we are safe to say this is where agile is really coming from.
For the US Army, you can read through ADRP 5-0 which outlines the Operations Process.