tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4024354974514788900.post1049920052793116085..comments2013-11-18T21:56:20.049-05:00Comments on Lean Thinking Your Software: How Deep are your Pockets ?John Goodsenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14785659077472008036noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4024354974514788900.post-59150704766321083942010-09-01T13:09:41.183-04:002010-09-01T13:09:41.183-04:00I use Schwaber's version of this graph, myself...I use Schwaber's version of this graph, myself - the one that he had on the videos he made for Conchango explaining Scrum some years back. It really "clicks" for execs to see it put this way. If my audience is in for some fun, I follow this up with the penny-flipping game to show process bottlenecks and inefficiencies.<br /><br />Per Alex's comments above, there are numerous instances where it is actually better to release a product without what would be considered a "full slate" of features. In today's economy, time-to-market is critical, and this forces us to look at the most valuable features to release.<br /><br />Examples? How about the iPhone originally releasing without Cut & Paste? Kobo eBook reader releasing with half the features of Kindle? These products have enjoyed significant popularity because they didn't try to get it all in - they tried to get as much as they could reasonably achieve to get the product to market faster.Chris R. Chapmanhttp://blog.chapmanconsulting.canoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4024354974514788900.post-35003796368540559652010-08-19T15:57:51.039-04:002010-08-19T15:57:51.039-04:00Very nice. Tells the story very well. I'm stea...Very nice. Tells the story very well. I'm stealing this. Thanks!Ron Jeffrieshttp://www.xprogramming.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4024354974514788900.post-64441361570251345022010-08-19T14:29:28.842-04:002010-08-19T14:29:28.842-04:00True, unless you can not compromise on functionali...True, unless you can not compromise on functionality. Sometimes software has to be released with complete set of features, otherwise it will loose its marketing edge. Would it make sense to release a math program for instance that only adds numbers, postponing the release of subtraction to a later date? Would you ever come back to that page?Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04274367724704289660noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4024354974514788900.post-57110039690284751962010-08-19T13:32:07.773-04:002010-08-19T13:32:07.773-04:00I like the graph.
Ron & Chet have a game wher...I like the graph.<br /><br />Ron & Chet have a game where they have people experience it. <br /><br />If you crunch the numbers, it's even worse. As I recall the Waterfall delivery cycle never catches up in terms of ROI.Michael Sahotahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06616916675340480286noreply@blogger.com