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Project Myopia: Why projects damage software #NoProjects

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Projects fail. Some say 40% of all IT projects fail, some say 70%. And it has been that way for years.Each project fails for its own reasons but they all share one thing in the Project Model.Could it be the project model itself which creates failure?In this tour de force Allan Kelly explains why the project model is a poor fit for managing software development. Working from industry recognized definitions of projects he describes how the model deviates from reality then goes on to Why focusing on time, scope, and cost damages software, creates goal displacement and reduces quality.- How projects miss the bigger picture.- Why maximizing value demands work across projects.- When debt is good and how projects increase technical debt to the detriment of value delivery.- The false projects and conflicts that arise when companies apply the language of projects to continuing work.Projects end. Successful software continues. Twenty-first century digital businesses want to continue and grow."If you are managing programmers, working with them directly or indirectly, or recently joined the profession, it is a must read. It explains how the maximise the value of the programmers work in the enterprise large or small, and how to avoid the trap of long-term planning in a world where the only constant is change." Bronek Kozicki"The project model does not fit the reality of managing software development. In this bracingly short book Allan provides an eloquent critique, landing his points well without waffle.Read this then the companion volume, Continuous Digital, which provides practical solutions to the problems uncovered here." Ewan MilneAn excellent book which thoughtfully critiques the "project" construct that we have all been conditioned to accept as "normal". This book is thought provoking, explaining Allan's views and experiences on how and why projects are harming the development of software. This book links in to Allan's other book "Continuous Digital" (This book provides the critique and rationale, which I believe Continuous Digital builds on).If you work on change projects the that involve, or are driven by, software.. then this book will be for you! It challenges thinking and provokes thought." Adrian Reed"This book is an excellent exploration of the short-sightedness of the project model for software, and should be essential reading for anyone involved in managing software development, delivery, or operations." Matthew Skelton"A short, but enjoyable read. Allan covers, categorically, the thinking behind moving away from projects (as per the #noprojects conversation): where it's appropriate, why it works, and what we can do to move away from it. He defines what he means by a project (or rather uses the definitions defined by PMI and PRINCE2), and categorically dismantles the reasons behind using them in most modern contexts. From arguments of quality to economy, you'll be left with a solid understanding of why you probably don't want to use projects, and move towards continuous digital delivery.""Well-structured, well-argued, and entertaining. A very worthwhile read." Gary F

138 pages, Kindle Edition

Published July 28, 2018

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108 people want to read

About the author

Allan Kelly

21 books16 followers
Allan Kelly has held just about every job in the software world, from system admin to development manager by way of programmer and product manager. Today he works helping teams adopt and deepen Agile practices, and writing far too much. He specialises in working with software product companies and aligning products and processes with company strategy.

He is the author of three books: "Xanpan - reflections on agile and software development" (https://leanpub.com/xanpan), "Business Patterns for Software Developers" and “Changing Software Development: Learning to be Agile”; the originator of Retrospective Dialogue Sheets (http://www.dialoguesheets.com), a regular conference speaker and frequent contributor to journals.

More about Allan at http://www.allankelly.net and on Twitter as @allankellynet (http://twitter.com/allankellynet).

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Yannick Grenzinger.
57 reviews6 followers
March 6, 2019
An overall good short book about why you should stop using project management and associated terminology for software development.
However if you are already doing agile product dev, you will not really learn anything new except good citation and clarification.
If you think project management is the only way, this book will maybe change your point of view :)
Profile Image for Jose M. Beas.
5 reviews4 followers
March 15, 2019
Short book explaining the #NoProjects meme focused on the negative aspects of a project based management. Unfortunately all practical aspects are derived to a previous book “Requirements and User Stories” and an upcoming new book “Continuous Digital”. Nevertheless, even for someone with experience on management or with previous exposure to the idea of #NoProjects, this book brings some interesting ideas like trying to change the metaphor for technical debt.
Profile Image for James Healy.
36 reviews5 followers
March 26, 2019
I broadly agree with the premise of this book, but I found the writing style hard to get into. Lucky it's short: I pushed though and made myself finish it.

Worth a read if you find yourself in a company that writes software via a project-based structure, but I probably won't actively recommended it.

The bit I found most valuable was the discussion on technical debt, and the proposal to rename it "technical liabilities".
7 reviews
February 24, 2023
For those familiar with agility all of this is nothing new, so not really worth the read, although there are a few good quotes to be picked up.

In general this feels more like an advertisement for the followup book ‘Continuous Digital’ than a standalone book. It would’ve been better to combine both (haven’t read the followup) into one I think.

Good points: quite short and to the point with little added fluff, so reads quickly and some clever analogies I can use in my work
Profile Image for Sicofonia.
344 reviews
April 11, 2019
For its content I would refer to other reviews that summed up pretty nicely what this book is about. For me, there were a couple of interesting points. Such as "diseconomies of scale" and "technical debt" to be considered as "technical liabilities".
Considering I got this book for free, I have not complaints. It made an interesting read during a 2.5 hrs flight.
Profile Image for Nathalie Karasek.
149 reviews19 followers
November 1, 2022
Nice book if you happen to work in a rather traditional project management environment. This can help to explain people in such environments why and when agile might be worth trying and also the differences. If you are already working in an agile company there is maybe not so much new information for you.
33 reviews
October 21, 2018
Read this if you want to understand why software projects fail?

This book explains really well the flaws of the project model and why it doesn't fit the software industry.
If you ever hear "Agile doesn't work here!" Look out if you are experiencing the project model effects .
Profile Image for Carlo Martinello.
305 reviews9 followers
October 5, 2022
I did not like the book.
I found it confusing and in some cases I didn't agree with some thesis.
However there are some good ideas so I saved to three stars
Profile Image for Victor.
41 reviews8 followers
January 23, 2019
This little book underlies the problems with the project model: the belief that successful products have an end date, encouraging large batches of work, putting a bigger emphasis on the iron triangle (deadline, budget and scope) than on customer value, discouraging learning that happens after the "start-date".

This book is only a critique. The author presents his solution in a different book: Continuous Digital: An agile alternative to projects
Profile Image for Diego Pacheco.
163 reviews10 followers
December 23, 2020
Good one

Good point of view on why projects are dangerous. Good samples and rationale behind it. Every engineer manager should read it.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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