MBSE as the Foundation of Connected Engineering Establishing a connected system understanding across domains and lifecycle stages

MBSE as the Foundation of Connected Engineering

Establishing a connected system understanding across domains and lifecycle stages
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From Data Fragmentation to Connected Engineering

Beyond fragmented tool landscapes, a second and more critical challenge emerges: the fragmentation of system information itself. Requirements, architectures, and design data are distributed across models, spreadsheets, and documents—often without a consistent structure or shared system logic.

Connected engineering addresses this challenge by ensuring that system information remains consistent, traceable, and structured across domains and lifecycle stages.

Model-Based Systems Engineering provides the foundation for this approach by structuring system information within a consistent model. It connects requirements, architecture, and implementation into a shared system logic—ensuring that engineering decisions are based on a coherent and continuously aligned system definition.

The System Model as a Connected Source of Truth

At the center lies an authoritative system model that integrates all relevant information—from requirements to implementation. Instead of distributing knowledge across documents and tools, engineering artifacts are structured within a shared system context.

Consistency and traceability are ensured through standardized structures and a shared system logic. Relationships between requirements, architecture, and implementation remain continuously aligned—even across project-specific adaptations.

This transforms the system model into a connected source of truth that anchors engineering decisions, reduces misalignment across domains, and improves confidence in design outcomes.

System model shown as a single source of truth connecting systems, design, validation, project management, and production teams through aligned role-specific engineering views.A shared system model connects requirements, architecture, and implementation into a single source of truth, ensuring alignment, traceability, and confidence in engineering decisions.


Connected engineering ensures system information remains consistent and traceable – enabling aligned decisions, reduced rework, and more predictable engineering outcomes.

Governance and Compliance in Connected Engineering

In complex and often regulated environments, engineering must provide transparency, traceability, and control. Requirements, architecture, and validation results need to remain consistently connected throughout the lifecycle.

Connected engineering establishes this foundation by linking system information across domains and development stages. Decisions are anchored in a shared system context, change histories become transparent, and dependencies remain visible.

This enables organizations to ensure compliance, reduce risk, and maintain confidence in engineering outcomes; shifting from reactive coordination to structured control, with clearer accountability and auditability.

Flexible Integration into Engineering Environments

Connected engineering does not replace domain-specific tools, it connects them. The system model provides a shared reference that links engineering environments while allowing each domain to operate within its context.
System information is not only structured within the model, but also connected to where it is applied.

Engineering activities remain aligned with system intent, even as they are executed across different tools and domains.

In this way, the system model becomes a central reference that connects system definition with implementation ensuring that connected engineering extends beyond data consistency into real execution, reducing translation errors and improving alignment between system definition and implementation.


Connected engineering establishes a reliable source of truth, improving governance, reducing risk, and maintaining alignment across domains and the entire lifecycle.

Extend to Stakeholder Collaboration

Explore how connected engineering extends beyond systems to people—enabling role-based access, shared understanding, and aligned decisions across the organization.

Explore Stakeholder Collaboration

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