MPD

MPD, schedule games

Schedule Game #5: Queen of Denial

  As a younger project manager, I had a conversation with my boss. “We can’t meet your schedule. Here’s what it’s going to take.” My boss said, “You can’t be serious about not meeting my schedule. I’m sure if you just put your mind to it, you’ll meet the date.” My jaw dropped as he […]

MPD, schedule games

Schedule Game #3: Bring Me a Rock

  I’ve been talking to a beleaguered colleague about his project schedule. “No matter what date I give them (senior management), they want an earlier date. I told them it doesn’t take nine women to make a baby in one month, I need some time for this project!” The Bring me a rock schedule game

MPD, schedule games

Schedule Game #2: 90% Done

  I was a fortunate young developer. In my first three months at work, I ran into the 90% done schedule game. I did it to myself. I estimated a particular task was going to take 6 weeks. Of course, being an arrogant and naive developer, it never occurred to me to break the task

Books, MPD

Announcement: Behind Closed Doors

  I’m thrilled to announce that you can see the announcement of Esther’s and my book, currently entitled Behind Closed Doors: Secrets of Great Management Revealed. Yes, this is the book we pair-wrote. We’re in the final stretch. First is working with Andy and Dave and whomever from Pragmatic Bookshelf to make sure we didn’t

MPD, schedule games

Schedule Game #1: Schedule Chicken

  I’ve been meaning to write a series of posts on schedule games, and a story I heard over the weekend has jolted me into writing about schedule chicken. I’m most familiar with schedule chicken that happens in meetings. Usually in a project status meeting, with the project manager and the project team, especially where

management, MPD

“I Need a Technical Project Manager”

Two different colleagues wrote me with similar conundrums. Their managers wants a “technical” project manager. One colleague was a hardware person, the other was a tester. They have both been managing software projects for several years. No one has told them they were ineffective. (I’ve discussed this issue before: The Difference Between Project Managers and

MPD

Seeing What's Going On

  Clarke Ching’s post, Functional Blindess, reminded me to post the ways I know about how to see the current state in a project or in an organization. For projects: Ask to see a demo. Can you see anything at all? If you can’t see the results of prototype tests, unit tests, some kind of

MPD

Recording of my Nine Steps to Becoming More Agile

  Roy Osherove taped my talk, “Nine Steps to Becoming More Agile” at the Israel Agile group meeting a couple of weeks ago. I was pleasantly surprised by how good the quality of the recording is. The recording isn’t perfect, because I walk back and forth across the room when I speak. I didn’t remember

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