DOD Official Lauds New Program to Streamline Acquisition Process

Published on August 16, 2024

William A. LaPlante, undersecretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment, on Wednesday praised a new Defense Department pilot program designed to streamline DOD's process for procuring new military technology by making what has been a sequential process for onboarding new military capabilities more simultaneous. 

During a panel discussion at an industry conference on emerging defense technologies in downtown Washington and in a recent opinion piece he authored on the topic, LaPlante explained how the Competitive Advantage Pathfinders program seeks to identify technology potentially useful to multiple military services that may be stuck somewhere in the acquisition process. 

LaPlante labeled the three traditional, bureaucratic processes — determining requirements, determining funding and acquiring new technology — "the three-legged stool" or "iron triangle," and explained to conference attendees that CAP-derived solutions are arrived at by facilitating collaboration, removing barriers to the process and then validating and disseminating lessons learned throughout DOD.  

"CAPs work by getting representatives — and buy in — from the resources, requirements and acquisition communities [the legs of the stool/triangle] together to address whatever might be the cause of the delay, be it funding, contract rules or interservice concurrence," he wrote in the op-ed. 

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