May 23, 2007 – Dvorak on Microsoft’s acquisition of aQuantive
$6 Billion? Did I hear that right? A CLASSIC column by Dvorak. This is just astonishing. The photo of Mr. Ballmer is priceless.
May 23, 2007 – Dvorak on Microsoft’s acquisition of aQuantive
$6 Billion? Did I hear that right? A CLASSIC column by Dvorak. This is just astonishing. The photo of Mr. Ballmer is priceless.
May 20, 2007 – The Third Deadly Sin of Software Projects – Its All About the People
The Third Sin of Software Projects is failing to understand its all about the people – attracting, retaining, and helping the best software development professionals available to succeed. The people on the project are the key determining factor of success. Let’s look at a few of the key factors in what we need in our people.
Teams – In addition to having the most productive and motivated professionals, we need to be able to have them work effectively in a team. Dysfunctional personalities, poor attitudes, or weak contributors will torpedo a team very quickly. Any of these attributes in a team member negates all the positives above. Take a developer who is tremendously productive and knowledgeable, but just has a very negative attitude and they can drag everyone else down, kill cooperation and communication, and single handedly cause a project to fail. Conversely, a team that is made up of top-notch people that are motivated, focused, and check egos at the door can turn out the most innovative solutions imaginable.
Trust – finally, the key essential ingredient in the organization that makes it all work is trust. People within the team must trust each other to deliver, development must trust product mangers, teams must trust their leaders, and all the way through the organization. Very recently, I’ve heard about a situation where a new leader came into a development team and half the team left the company. It’s safe to say that more emphasis on building trust was needed! A subtle implication of trust is that integrity is required for trust to exist.