This book shows how to integrate software metrics into the unified software development process with the goal of giving managers more control over the progress of projects and the allocation of... This description may be from another edition of this product.
I found this book to be very enlightening. It has presented many concepts that are reasonable and applicable to the work environment that I am in. It has been of great assistance and is well written.
Actual values to feed the formulas would have been great
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Our company has been trying to improve its processes for almost three years now but our efforts were and are still fruitless. Although we were recording four core metrics (we were using conventional productivity not process productivity so I'm counting this one out) -- effort, time, size and defects (although not the defect rate), we didn't know their relationship until now. The knowledge we have gained from this book will help us renew our efforts next year. Statistics know-how is somewhat needed to understand some of the chapters although you won't actually be computing anything. I mean if you don't know what normal curves, medians, standard deviations are, then you'd be at a lost. I've bought a book on statistics to relearn it along with my colleagues. However, the graphs make up for it. The book was also somewhat lacking in giving actual values to put in the formulas. I think I'm interpreting the data incorrectly because I'm getting very big or very small values from the process productivity formula. I've e-mailed QSM but they haven't replied yet but I do hope they will. Nevertheless, the book is a good companion to other software quality books that focus on people, methods, processes, tools but don't mention how to measure them objectively. Get this book if you're part of the software industry regardless of your title, rank, responsibilities, or party (client or developer).
Evolution and refinement of earlier work
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
The authors have impeccable credentials in the software estimating discipline, with Putnam's experience dating back to his breakthrough approach using Rayleigh curves to model staffing developed in the early 1970s, and Myers as his coauthor and collaborator for three earlier books from which this one is roughly based and represents a distillation and refinement of earlier ideas.Material in this book is not done justice if you go solely by the table of contents. It contains deep thought and a wealth of information that support the five core metrics proposed. After introductory material in the first chapter, this book picks up pace by going into what the authors consider to be the right metrics and why. They follow this discussion with a chapter that shows how they align to a development lifecycle (using the RUP's inception, elaboration, construction and transition phases as a framework). This is followed by two chapters that address the five metric areas, time, effort, quality, workload and productivity, and sizing. Chapters 7 and 8 address productivity and reliability as they relate to the metrics. I liked the material in the final chapters the most because it takes the concepts in the first eight chapters and applies them to problem spaces such as project control, requirements management, trade-off analysis, and how to use estimates to formulate accurate bids. This material is practical and reflects the real world. Among my favorite chapters are 15 (Replan Projects in Trouble), 17 (Evaluate Bids on the Facts), and 21 (Metrics Backstop Negotiation). However, each chapter in between was also on the mark and credible.If you are immersed in an unmanageable morass of metrics and want to manage to a smaller set of key indicators in projects or maintenance this book is an essential resource. If you are using Ad Hoc metrics or none at all, this material is an ideal starting point.
A "reader friendly" instructional how-to guide
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
Collaboratively written by Lawrence H. Putnam (President of the software management consulting firm Quantitative Software Management) and Ware Myers (a professional independent consultant and contributing editor of "Computer" and "IEEE Software"), Five Core Metrics: The Intelligence Behind Successful Software Management is a "reader friendly" instructional how-to guide to utilizing the reliable development processes and techniques that help software managers efficiently allocate limited resources and carefully track progress, ensuring optimum quality software with a minimum of wasted effort. Five core metrics of Time, Effort, Size, Reliability, and Process Productivity are introduced as a means to measure and adjust ongoing processes to constantly changing real-world conditions. An exceptional business guide in its field, Five Core Metrics is highly recommended reading for anyone charged with the responsibility of using and creating software projects using or incorporating metric measurements.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest
everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We
deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $15.
ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.