I recently noticed a LinkedIn post on success and failure that led me to the need to comment. The quote from the article that gave me some consternation: The minute you have a back-up plan, you’ve admitted you’re not going to succeed. ~Elizabeth Holmes Theranos Founder & CEO When I am driving a car, I […]
When we discuss risk in project management circles, we often discuss it in terms of severity and probability. There is much more to risk and how it impacts and the implications it may have on our project. Risk Probability and Severity As the saw goes, few things are certain, except death and taxes. The more […]
We can use a decision matrix to help determine the best test strategy. In this instance, the decision matrix is comparing what we believe to be vehicle testing success criterion (such as the fidelity of the test results and ability to duplicate, the speed at which we can test and meeting critical dependencies) against a number of […]
There are many ways for us to evaluate the project we have discussed the monetary evaluation techniques in our books. These business measurements provide us with mechanisms to assess the business viability of the product. There are also ways to evaluate the project strategy with decision-making tools like Pugh. In an earlier post we demonstrated […]
No matter the industry or domain, there will be times when we need to quickly make a management or technical decision. Decision matrix allows us to compare a range of solutions to a defined set of criterion. A quick and easy tool to accomplish this assessment is the decision matrix, of which there are two […]
Time boxed or time boxing is when we have a hard fixed time around the activity we are undertaking. For example, we may decide that our team is allowed a fixed amount of time to plan or estimate. A meeting has a fixed duration and done effectively an agenda that further breaks down the time […]
Features and Business Case The last blog post was about how we justify the project and the business case from an agile perspective along with a study from The Standish Group. The reason attaching the business case to the product backlog, or in the case of conventional project management specific requirements, is so we have […]
Project Prioritization There are two levels of prioritization for agile. The first is the product backlog – the prioritization of the scope of the project. The second prioritization is how we populate the sprint contents. The top priority product backlog items are used for the decomposition for the sprint, but there may be prerequisites that […]
Personally, I find connecting what I already know to some new thing I am learning facilitates and understanding of that new thing. We have frequently compared agile and conventional project management on our blog, for example, Epic Project Management Battle: Retrospective vs. White Book. Today we are going to compare the WBS dictionary with […]