Chapter Abstract:
When the city of Denver was refurbishing its airport, errors in the software that controlled the automatic baggage system persisted for nine months. The airport's planner...Show MoreMetadata
Chapter Abstract:
When the city of Denver was refurbishing its airport, errors in the software that controlled the automatic baggage system persisted for nine months. The airport's planners watched their bond rating fall to junk status because the project hemorrhaged red ink at the rate of $1.1 million a day in interest and operating costs. The impact of similar stories repeated over time is that poor software causes major cost overruns, exposes companies to potential liability for defects, and jeopardizes economic opportunity. The wise project manager knows that four factors correlate to productivity in sophisticated systems: people, product, process, and project. In this chapter, we will examine each in order to be able to weigh its value for a given product, and thereby give you the basis to develop a rationale for the apportionment of available money.
People: Cultivate the Guru and Support the Majority
How to Recognize a Guru
How to Attract a Guru to Your Project
How to Keep Your Gurus Working
How to Support the Majority
Product: ?>Buy Me!?>
Reliable Software Products
Useful Software Products
Good User Experience
Process: ?>OK, How Will We Build This??>
Agile Processes
Object Oriented Opportunities
Meaningful Metrics
Project: Making It Work
Additional Problems
Additional Case Studies
Page(s): 39 - 71
Copyright Year: 2005
Edition: 1
ISBN Information: