Author Archive
Accurate Early Estimating with Rules Relative Size Scale
Download Rules Relative Size Scale
Grant Rule’s quick and easy guide to accurate early estimating of software project size, costs, and viability based on clothing sizes.
201109 Using Models and Standards
Download full article: Using Models and Standards
Limitations of models
IT is at the heart of an organisation, enabling and supporting everything the organisation does from HR, to product development to customer service. In many areas of industry and public service, IT no longer simply supports other parts of the organisation to develop products and serve customers, IT is integral to the product and the way customers interact with the business.
The challenge for IT professionals is to find effective ways of realising the full potential of technology-intensive business systems. Considerable know-how and experience has been accumulated over IT’s 50-year business history, and much has been invested in devising quality models and standards. However, a great many myths also abound, frequently created or promoted by parties with a vested interest in a particular model. Quality standards show you where to improve – but not how or why.
An evidence-driven approach should be taken to the adoption of standards and frameworks, as with every other business decision:
- Understand the model-maker’s purpose, and use the guidance provided in appropriate ways. It is guidance; not a rulebook.
- Focus on the outcome not the certificate. Compliance, or the attainment of certificates and interim targets, all too often becomes confused with true business goals. This is dysfunctional; meaning it is behaviour which detracts from overall business performance.
- There should always be a sound business case for adopting an improvement programme, defining clear business benefits and measurable outcomes.
- Measure progress and business results – not compliance to the model. If it matters, measure it. And if it doesn’t, don’t. It is possible to be effective and compliant, but only if effectiveness is the focus. A focus on compliance will not deliver improved effectiveness – or the associated business benefits of improved effectiveness.
- Communication is key to successful and sustainable improvement. Good measurement practices and short feedback loops are vital.
There are many bear-traps into which numerous well-intentioned improvement initiatives have disappeared without trace. Integrated team-working, responsibility-based performance management, and many other behaviours which support value focus, continuous flow, and pull, are often counter-intuitive, especially to staff used to operating in a compliance culture. Because 75-80% of organisations are ‘average’, achieving typically poor levels of performance, few people ever experience ‘high performance’ and do not realise there are better ways of doing things than those they are used to. To achieve real changes in effectiveness, most organisations will need a specialist guide whose experience goes beyond knowledge of the models themselves.
201101 All You Wanted to Know About Software Measurement
A quick guide to functional size measurement and estimating, including a comparison of the common FSM methods.
AllAboutFPA
201010 SMS Partners with the NCC to deliver the IT Department Accreditation
SMS is pleased to announce a new Partnership with the NCC to deliver the IT Department Accreditation scheme.
The ITDA provides independent assurance of competence that can be used to demonstrate departmental capability. It has been developed with government backing to address the need for a single, cross-discipline accreditation.
The National Computing Council’s 43-year track record as an independent and impartial promotor of effective use of IT made it the ideal design authority for the scheme. Welcoming SMS to the NCC’s ITDA team, the NCC’s Managing Director, Steve Fox, said: “We are delighted to welcome SMS as a partner for the IT Department business improvement and Accreditation service (ITDA). SMS’ extensive experience in performance measurement will be a great asset in taking the ITDA scheme forward.”
The ITDA is intended for use as a tool to identify departmental strengths and weaknesses as part of a continuous improvement programme. It is appropriate for internal IT departments or stand-alone IT service companies that either specialise in IT service delivery or buy-in services as clients for others in their organisations. It is scalable and suits all sizes of IT function and all sectors. SMS Managing Director Grant Rule says, “The ITDA is an excellent addition to SMS’s existing competence in CMMI and ISO standards. It is a unique, low-cost assessment which provides a department-wide benchmark of business performance.”
The ITDA measures :
- Business Management. How well does the department manage its business resources and capacity?
- Business Direction. How strong is the planning and implementation of the department’s business strategy?
- Business or Service Generation. Does the department work well to promote its expertise and encourage the effective use of IT for its sponsors and customers?
- Delivery and Operations. How well does the department carry out its responsibilities?
- Customer Relationships. Does the department work well with its sponsors and customers? How do the department’s customers perceive the IT department?
Download the ITDA Brochure: ITDA_Brochure
To find out more about what an ITDA accreditation can do for your department, contact Philip Standing p.standing@smsexemplar.com or call the SMS office on 0843 289 5174.