Home
>
Features
>
Case Studies
Old Ware Stories
Daniel Starr
(September 25, 2008)
|
|
Rigidity, late-blooming requirements conflicts, triangular relationships and simple geography conspired to deliver half of what a major technology project promised. On this effort, it seemed, you could change everything but the way the team worked.
Project Yourself is an ongoing series that invites project professionals to share practical advice, personal insights and pet peeves based on their experiences in the field. Anonymity, if desired, is assured. To submit an article for consideration, contact the editor.
It should have been a cause for celebration. The Big New Controller (BNC) project, after slipping its schedule and busting its budget, had finally delivered hardware to the lab for performance testing. But the joy was short-lived: tests quickly determined the BNC was delivering barely half the performance it had promised — a bad sign for a project whose purpose was to improve performance. And there were rumors that the BNC development team had known it would fall far short of requirements.
It was time for some hard questions: How had the project fallen so short of its promises? What could be done now, given the company's dependence on this project? How could we prevent such problems in future projects? I was part of a group sent to find answers, and in the process I learned some important lessons about human nature, the delicate negotiation surrounding requirements, and the importance of geometry and geography in determining what a project ends up building.
Background: A River of Money
Today, an embedded computer system involves a commercial processor (chip or box, depending on your needs), operating system and software development tools, upon which you build money-making applications.
Please login/register to read the entire article.
Sponsored Announcements and Special Offers
|
Clarizen Project Management Software allows businesses to easily manage all of their work, projects, resources and budgets in a single, simple to use online environment. Clarizen’s work management tools facilitate team collaboration and project execution, ensuring data is always up-to-date and aligned with business objectives. Sign up for your 30-Day Free Trial TODAY!
New On-Demand Webinar "Driving Product Strategy From The Top Down". If you manage or are involved with project and product decisions for multiple products, this webcast will provide practical insights and tools to make your job easier. Learn how multiple projects "fit" together, the value customers receive from a portfolio approach, and successful methods in PPM tools. Learn best-practices, communicating strategy, what to consider when making multiple product decisions.
You hear about them in trade journals, boardrooms and the PR of your competitors. What are smarter products and how does your organization make them better than your competition? Learn how-to turn product development in competitive advantage. This new IBM whitepaper explores the best practices for product development and highlights essential techniques to be employed to build/ drive innovative technologies.
How can your company increase efficiency and maintain a competitive advantage in the PM marketplace? Learn how Oracle's Primavera project portfolio management solutions can help your organization succeed in these tough economic times. This free whitepaper paper highlights important elements and benefits of standardizing business processes and how PPM can help your business and technology succeed throughout the company.
|
|
|
|
|