Army Software Factory

Army Software Factory (ASWF)
ActiveJanuary 2021 - present
CountryUnited States United States
Branch United States Army
Part of United States Army Transformation and Training Command
Garrison/HQAustin Community College Rio Grande Campus
MottosBy Soldiers, For Soldiers
Websitehttps://soldiersolutions.swf.army.mil/
Commanders
DirectorCol. Vito Errico

The United States Army Software Factory (ASWF) is a software development initiative of the United States Army Transformation and Training Command (T2COM) to teach, develop and employ developers from both the military ranks and civilian workforce.[1] The concept is to allow the Army to create its own digital tools and platforms[2] and in many case the tools are replacing decades old paper records and forms.[3]

History

The ASWF was originally stood up under the Army Futures Command at Austin Community College Rio Grande Campus in Austin, Texas in January 2021[1] under co-directors Maj. Vito Errico and Maj. Jason Zuniga.[4] The ASWF seeks out rotating groups of soldiers (E-5 sergeant through O-3 captain)[5] and civilians through a competitive application process and trains them in modern agile software development to solve problems that can come from any soldier of any rank throughout the army.[6] Soldiers who are accepted are sent to ASWF for a 3-year term in one of the following tracks: platform engineer, software developer, product manager or designer.

Army units with problems make contact through the ASWF website. If the project is accepted, a team goes out to the unit to understand what needs to be done and to work on a “problem statement.”[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Army Software Factory Information Sheet" (PDF). US Army. May 5, 2021.
  2. ^ Field, Madeline (2026-03-30). "Every Soldier a Software Builder: Governing the Army's New Digital Workforce". War on the Rocks. Retrieved 2026-04-12.
  3. ^ Manuel, Rojoef (2025-11-26). "US Army Rolls Out Soldier-Built Software for Airborne Training Records". The Defense Post. Retrieved 2026-04-12.
  4. ^ "Deterring great power conflict through software development". www.army.mil. 2021-04-16. Retrieved 2026-04-12.
  5. ^ Finster, Bryan (2025-05-21). "5-Minute DevOps: How The US Army Does it Better Than You". Defense Unicorns. Retrieved 2026-04-12.
  6. ^ Davis Skelley, Katie (June 15, 2022). "Software Factory Helps Transform Army from Industrial to Information Age". CHIPS.
  7. ^ Magnuson, Stew (May 4, 2022). "Army Software Factory Touts Early Successes". National Defense Magazine.

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