Robert Grossman
Kelly Johnson's Rules
- The Skunk Works' program manager must be delegated
practically complete control of his program in all aspects. He
should report to a division president or higher.
- Strong but small project offices must be provided both by
the military and industry.
- The number of people having any connection with the
project must be restricted in an almost vicious manner. Use a
small number of good people (10 percent to 25 percent compared to
the so-called normal systems).
- A very simple drawing and drawing release system with
great flexibility for making changes must be provided.
- There must be a minimum number of reports required, but
important work must be recorded thoroughly.
- There must be a monthly cost review covering not only
what has been spent and committed but also projected costs to the
conclusion of the program. Don't have the books ninety days late
and don't surprise the customer with sudden overruns.
- The contractor must be delegated and must assume more
than normal responsibility to get good vendor bids for
subcontract on the project. Commercial bid procedures are very
often better than military ones.
- The inspection system as currently used by the Skunk
Works, which has been approved by both the Air Force and the
Navy, meets the intent of existing military requirements and
should be used on new projects. Push more basic inspection
responsibility back to the subcontractors and vendors. Don't
duplicate so much inspection.
- The contractor must be delegated the authority to test
his final product in flight. He can and must test it in the
initial stages. If he doesn't, he rapidly loses his competency to
design other vehicles.
- The specification applying to the hardware must be agreed
to in advance of contracting. The Skunk Works practice of having
a specification section stating clearly which important military
specification items will not knowingly be complied with and
reasons therefore is highly recommended.
- Funding a program must be timely so that the contractor
doesn't have to keep running to the bank to support government
projects.
- There must be absolute mutual trust between the military
organization and the contractor with very close liaison on a
day-to-day basis. This cuts down misunderstanding and
correspondence to an absolute minimum.
- Access by outsiders to the project and its personnel must
be strictly controlled by appropriate security measures.
- Because only a few people will be used in engineering and
most other areas, ways must be provided to reward good
performance by pay, not simply related to the number of personnel
supervised.
This is from www.rgrossman.com