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Managing Test Priorities for Packaged Software

© 1998 Johanna Rothman. Abstract Organizations produce and buy packaged software to save time and money. Often, the producers feel that savings will result from diminished product testing, but that wish may simply mean the software test professionals (STPs) won’t be given enough time to test and assess a software product as thoroughly as they […]

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Defining and Managing Project Focus

© 1998 Johanna Rothman. Most project managers want to reduce risk during a project. One way to reduce overall risk is to define and focus the project goals up front, and continually verify those goals and progress toward those goals during the project. Bob Grady [1], claims there are three common goals for software product

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Iterative Software Project Planning and Tracking

Project management can be described as the activity of bringing all participants from within a department to successfully complete a product deliverable. Iterative planning and tracking are techniques used by some project managers to avoid having to choose between reducing the number of features or extending the schedule. Abstract Project management can be described as

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Recognizing Resistance: A Personal Perspective

© 1997 Johanna Rothman. Introduction Resistance, especially to process improvement, can take many forms and levels of intensity. Process improvement, the activities of changing how people work, can appear (and can be) very threatening to people. For some of us, it is difficult to see the resistance at first. We may think that people misunderstood

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Case Study: From “Chaos” to “Repeatable” in Four Months

© 1997 Johanna Rothman. Abstract Recent writing in the software process improvement literature [1,2] discuss those organizations who start off at an ad hoc level (CMM level 1) and proceed to a repeatable level (CMM level 2) and higher. However, there are many organizations who cannot make progress towards level 2 until they have a

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Is Your Investment in Quality and Process Improvement Paying Off?

© 1997 Johanna Rothman. Abstract Organizations are spending more time and money on their testing and process efforts. But, how do you know whether or not the testing and process improvements efforts are paying off? One way is to define specific metrics to measure the effectiveness of your process, and the efficiency with which the

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Quality Driven Project Management

© 1997 Johanna Rothman. Abstract Product management is concerned with implementing new features. Developers are concerned with improving the existing features. How does a project manager bring these concerns together in a way that ensures both product direction and product robustness are addressed? One way to elevate competing concerns about implementing new or old features

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Making Geographically Dispersed Development Work

Abstract If you manage software engineers, or software product development, sooner or later, you will be faced with a vexing problem: not all the people are in one place, or even in one time zone. This paper analyzes the problems associated with geographically distributed product development, and discusses possible solutions to reduce project risk. Real

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Software Quality Assurance: Should It Remain a Separate Organization?

© 1996 Johanna Rothman. This article was originally published in SQA Quarterly, May 1996. Product development teams are organized for one major purpose: to produce a product people will buy. Software product development teams have a secondary, but no less important goal- the ability to produce products again and again. To effect those goals, product

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