management

Articles

Managing For Results

by Johanna Rothman. This article was originally publised in Software DevelopmentMagazine, June 2002. If you’re getting stuck counting cars in the parking lot or fetching meals to fuel your team’s overtime marathons, dump the dinners and trade in the clock for more accurate means of measuring productivity. By Johanna Rothman How do you find out who’s […]

Articles

Tips for Passing the Baton

by Johanna Rothman. This article was originally published in Software Development Magazine, February 2002. Sometimes, multitasking runs amok. If you’re suffocating under piles of paperwork or controlling your staff’s every action, you need help: Learn to delegate duties and regain your focus as a manager. Once you’ve made the transition from engineer to technical lead,

Articles

Livable Layoffs

by Johanna Rothman. This article was originally publised in Software DevelopmentMagazine, November 2001. Despite the horror stories, there are ways to treat people with respect while ending their employment. The “new economy” has crashed, and it’s layoff time in the software industry. Your company is having financial trouble, and laying people off is the only alternative.

Articles

Project Portfolio Management 101

by Johanna Rothman. Originally published in Cutter’s Business-IT Alignment E-Mail Advisor, October 17, 2001. Too many projects? Not sure which projects are most important? Welcome to project portfolio management. A client, Tim, is having trouble with his portfolio management. Senior management is organizing next year’s budget and hiring plan. They want more projects in the

Articles

What Do They Pay You to Do?

© 2001 Johanna Rothman. This article was originally published in STQE, September/October 2001 issue, as the Last Word column. One of my colleagues recently took a job as a software quality assurance manager at a commercial software company. Jill had always been determined to improve the product development process wherever she’d worked, and seeing “process

Articles

Other People’s Problems

by Johanna Rothman. This article was originally published in Software Development, September 2001. We all have problems at work, sometimes more than we can easily handle. Managers tend to encounter more sticky situations because of the nature of our job. And not only do we have our own problems—others often ask us to solve theirs, as

Articles

Crisis? What Crisis? A Contrarian Perspective

© 2001 Johanna Rothman. This article was originally published in Cutter IT Journal, June 2001. Software organizations take forever to hire technical people, we overwork them, our projects are late, we can’t get everything done. We must have a people shortage, yes? No. True, we have plenty of problems, but we have enough people to

Articles

A Problematic Truth: You’re Too Valuable Where You Are

“No Fred, we’re not considering you for that promotion. You’re too valuable where you are.” How many of us have heard those words, or said them at least once to our staff? Sometimes, we use the “too valuable” phrase to avoid discussing problems with a staff member, problems you can bring out in the open

Articles

Managerial Competence: The Key to Surviving Change

by Johanna Rothman. Originally published in Cutter’s Business-IT Alignment E-Mail Advisor, April 26, 2000. In response to Jim Highsmith’s Business-IT Strategies E-Mail Advisor of 1 March, “Change Is Changing,” I’d like to ask: Is the Internet really changing everything? I’m not so sure. In the 14 February issue of Business Week, there was a fascinating

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