Blog Corner (Main Street)

Our “Village Square” as they say. The place where town-folk converge to talk about anything they’d like on work-life in the Information Age. We see this as a corner where various topics from places like the Cutter Consortium will show up, such as Agile Methods, IT Trends, Project Management, Measurement and Project Estimation, Deadline Dynamics, and the like. Join the fray!,

O.F. - The Book!

Michael Mah’s pre-published ideas of the upcoming book, “Optimal Friction, People Dynamics at Work in the Information Age.” O.F. will focus on how technology projects behave under pressure, the inter-personal dynamics of teams and how we resolve and don’t resolve our differences, and the way people’s management of internal conflicts set the stage for the way we interact among ourselves. From time to time, you’ll see chapter postings here that will be open for comment and feedback.,

Tool Topics

They say a fool with a tool is still a fool. Nevertheless, why dig ditches with your hands when you can get the keys to a backhoe? In Tool Topics, you can talk tool issues, whatever they may be, whether it’s SLIM, Cocomo, CostXpert, MS-Project, Workbench, or whatever. It’s ironic that here we are at the pinnacle of high tech, and most folks still estimate effort and project costs using the wet-finger-in-the-wind or an Excel spreadsheet. And schedules? 99% of the time it’s whatever deadline the boss dictated. There’s a better way.

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March 22, 2006

2006 QSM Software Almanac - IT Metrics Edition

The 2006 QSM Software Almanac – IT Metrics Edition, is here! It contains more than 100 pages of analysis and observations that provide unparalleled access to the latest developments in the software industry.

It's with great pride that we're announcing the Almanac here on the pages of Optimal Friction. My partners here at QSM have assembled overviews and in-depth analysis of more than 500 completed projects from all major industries, collected in the last 5 years. One can easily peruse the (sometimes surprising) qualities and characteristics of “best/worst in class” projects, with the attendant implications about core metrics tradeoffs. Best of all, it describes extensive actionable intelligence gathered over more than 25 years of consulting practice as revealed by the software industry’s most detailed and comprehensive database of completed projects using the analysis capabilities within the QSM SLIM Suite of tools.

Special thanks to Doug Putnam, Kate Armel, Don Beckett, and all on the QSM team. Readers of the Almanac will no doubt recognize the heritage of this work, tracing to Larry Putnam's pioneering research on metrics for the software and Information Technology fields.

As the saying goes, “without metrics, you’re just a person with another opinion,” and the Almanac will, in easily understood, detailed, expert analysis, provide insight into the importance of collecting and analyzing core metrics, using history as a guide to the future. This volume makes a wonderful companion to the QSM SLIM Suite of tools for rapid, accurate benchmarking, estimating and “in flight” project control, right at the desktop. Users of SLIM will find the Almanac highly useful as benchmark data for software project estimates and productivity assessments.

No matter what your industry or corporate stovepipe, or the scope, schedule, staffing, technique or language used in your world: you will have a better grasp on industry trends that can will help improve your company’s project management and save time and money. For more information and ordering, please contact Sean Callaghan at QSM Associates 413-499-0988, ext 105. The cost is $500 with discounts on multiple volumes of 5 or more.

Posted by Mike at March 22, 2006 9:39 AM

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