MPD

MPD, requirements

Rank Requirements

One of the questions I ask project teams is how they know what to do when. Most of the time, the developers look at me as if I’ve grown two heads and say, “Well, we look at the requirements. We do the high ones first, the medium ones next, and the low ones if we […]

MPD

People Need Immediate Feedback

We’re getting ready for my parents’ 50th wedding anniversary, and my sister decided a scrapbook of family pictures would be a great present. She’s right, it will be wonderful. Mark and I were looking for pictures of us and our children, so we pulled out all of the pictures from the last 20 years. We

Books, MPD

Convincing Managers to Buy Books

  Some of my suggestions for people in my classes are simply to buy some good books for some specific information. When I suggest this, I sometimes hear “my manager won’t let me buy books.” As a bibliophile, I can’t understand that :-). Even though I do accept that not everyone is like me, you

defect, MPD

How Much Rework Does Your Project Perform?

  In the last few weeks, several people have asked me how much rework is normal. Well, if you’re working in a test-driven development environment, you probably have very little rework. My estimates for the few real test-driven projects I’ve seen is that they spend about 10-15% of their time on rework (finding problems and

MPD, project management

Rolling Wave Planning

Sometimes I discover that one of my great ideas has already been discovered by other people 🙂 I first wrote about rolling wave planning in 1997. For those of you who can’t stomach the paper (it was one of my earliest pieces of writing), here’s an updated description of rolling wave planning: Loop: Plan what

conference, MPD

Conferences are Cheap Training

  I’ve just returned from the last of my spring conferences. And, I’m struck again by how much training is available to people at conferences and how cheap it is. You may be shaking your head, saying, NO JR, Conferences are expensive, about $5000 per person for the week, once you factor in travel along

MPD

Extended Random Regression Testing

I’ve been at the STAR conference this week, and Cem Kaner’s keynote talk yesterday discussed the idea of extended random regression testing — take all your programmatic tests, and run them in random sequences for a long time. You’ll find defects you cannot find just running the tests by themselves. Here’s the logic behind this

MPD

Two Possible Uses for Certifications

I’m not a big fan of body-of-knowledge based certifications. Testing to someone to detect if they’ve learned the words in books is not adequate to determine actual skill on the job. (Note that there are skill-based certifications, generally from vendors, that appear to be quite useful at detecting if the person is capable of performing

MPD

Catching Up

I had a great time in Israel (taught an open-enrollment project management workshop plus a one-day tips and tricks as an onsite), and met up with Israeli bloggers. It was wonderful meeting people with whom I’d corresponded.Now that I’m back on the east coast and recovered from a little jet lag, I’ve been catching up

MPD

Meet up with Israel Bloggers?

I’m off to Israel for a week, starting today. If you’d like to meet me for dinner Sunday night, 20:00, contact Roy Osherove. If Sunday doesn’t work for you, send me an email and maybe we can figure something else out. Back to regular blogging tomorrow…

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