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Monthly News from Mike Cohn and Mountain Goat Software

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Mountain Goat Software
10 January 2013
News from the Peak
It's a new year--that fabled time of midnight parties, resolutions, and, for us Americans, football bowl games. Well, the parties and the big bowl games are over. So the only thing left is to make a resolution or two

One resolution many of us could--myself included--is to start tracking one bit of data that you aren't tracking. I've kind of been surprised that The Lean Startup book has been so well received by so many in the agile community. I highly recommend the book (full, belated review forthcoming on the website). I'm surprised at its reception among agilists because a central tenet of the book is actionable metrics and I've met too many people in the agile community who have been opposed to just about any metric of any kind. "Measuring takes too long; we should focus on developing new features, not on measuring things" and the like are comments I've heard too often.

Yes, many companies start large "metrics programs" and those often are too expensive (time-consuming) and aren't worth it. The key to success with metrics is measuring only things that will lead to different actions. These are what Lean Startup author Ries calls "actionable metrics." If having the data won't lead you to different behavior, don't bother collecting the metric.

So, for 2013, pick even one simple metric that can help your team and track if over time. I suspect it will lead to an improvement or two. But I further suspect that after awhile, the metric will no longer be worth collecting. Ditch it and gather one other bit of data then that may help you. Don't go overboard and ambitiously commit to collecting 50 different data points for your team. Collect one. Use it. Then pick another.

Good luck and best wishes for a great 2013.

Metrics You Can Bet On

Numbers may not lie, but measurements can sure mislead you. This article explores two myths about metrics and management and offers guidelines for devising project metrics that won't leave you broke and busted.

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Should Companies Measure Productivity in Story Points / Ideal Days?

Using story points or ideal days to measure productivity is a bad idea because it will lead the team to gradually inflate the meaning of a point--when trying to decide between calling something “two points” or “three points” it is clear they will round up if they are being evaluated on productivity as measured by the number of story points (or ideal days) finished per…

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Mike Cohn of Mountain Goat Software has Certified ScrumMaster, Certified Scrum Product Owner, Succeeding with Agile, Effective User Stories and Agile Estimating & Planning courses scheduled in Boulder, Copenhagen, Dallas, London, Orange County, Oslo, San Diego, and Silicon Valley.
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Mountain Goat Software
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Suite 400-108
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