| Free Newsletter |
Get the best articles sent to your inbox!
|
| Featured Products |
|
Any Brander Now you can brand resell rights products...even if you don't have branding rights!
Download Protector A fully automated download system developed for clickbank.com merchants.
Marketing Videos Over four hours of exclusive Internet marketing coaching videos.
Niche Profit Formula Easily create niche products, each running on auto-pilot, making money daily!
Splash Screen Generator Instantly add amazing Splash Screens to your website.
|
|
Scroll Box Buddy |
|
|
|
Adding more people to delaying projects
Author: Mukul Gupta
Website: http://www.script2please.com
Added: Mon, 25 Sep 2006 18:55:16 -0400
Category: Computers
Views: 126
Printable Version |
Send To Friends |
Bookmark |
Reprint
A project that can be done by a single developer in 3 months is said to be 3 man-month projects. Often the calendar duration is 45 – 60 days which means that the vendor organization will allocate 2 developers to work on it. So, with a quick calculation you can tell that a 3 man-month project will take 1.5 months if 2 developers are working on it. Does than mean that if you can have 3 developers working on project then this project can be done in 1 month? I don’t think so!
“….Add more people and get it done sooner” - This is the #1 idea that 90% people get when they have a pressing deadline and they want the project to be done sooner. But, as we know, this never has worked and it never will.
Let me introduce you to Brook’s Law:
Assigning more programmers to a project running behind schedule will make it even later, due to the time required for the new programmers to learn about the project, and the increased communications overhead
Dr. Fredrick Brooks wrote this in a book called “The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering” which was published in 1975. Today still after 25 years of first print, the law holds good and the book continues to be the bible of software engineering.
He gave us a group intercommunication formula which basically is n(n-1)/2, where “n” is the number of people working on the project.
So when we have a team of 2 people working this become 2(2-1)/2 = 1, i.e. when 2 people are working there is only 1 channel of communication. Lets see what happens when we have 4 people working on a that same project. The intercommunication channel becomes: 4(4-1)/2 = 6
The above examples clearly show that when the team size is doubled, the communication overhead has increased six times.
To know this is very important when a project is outsourced to a lower wage country like India. This is because the difference in wage rate is very tempting. The contracting company often pays $50/hr in-house whereas the project is contracted out at $10 per hour. Thus doubling the resources for a project at vendor’s organization still seems like a great option to impress the client with a faster delivery since it does not bear severe implications on profitability.
About the Author:
Mukul Gupta is the CMO of Indus
Net Technologies, an India based Internet
Consulting firm which specializes in
Opensource solutions. You can reach him
at script@script2please.com or
visit http://www.script2please.com
Reprint This Article
|
|