VIDEO: Excessive Jargon
Here's a short video that parodies what happens when you use too much jargon. No one understands anything!
A quest to understand things big and small... or how to survive as a Business Analyst and beyond.
Here's a short video that parodies what happens when you use too much jargon. No one understands anything!
Here are some resources I've come across that may help you.
Requirements management
Best Practices for Enhancing Project Success is a recorded webinar that you can watch at your leisure.
More than 70 percent of software project failures can be traced to poor requirements management. The root cause: the gap between what the business team wants, and what is communicated to IT for delivery back to the business.Disaster Recovery
IT execs are insecure about their disaster recovery plans.ALL-IN-ONE GUIDES: Disaster Recovery
That's according to a new survey by Rochester, N.Y.-based Harris Interactive Inc. that reported 39% of executives polled gave their plans a letter grade of C or worse, revealing a troubling lack of confidence in disaster readiness.
The survey results also indicated that this lack of confidence in disaster recovery planning is growing. A similar survey conducted in 2004 found that only 24% of executives gave their plans poor grades.
This All-in-One Guide will get you on the path to a good, solid DR plan and show you what you need to do to maintain it. It starts you off with DR planning and design with understanding recovery capabilities and tools, and then takes you right through to DR implementation, security and testing.Alignment
The IT/business alignment topics page provides CIOs and IT management with up-to-date information and resources on budgeting, IT governance, IT spending, leadership and strategy, and Return On Investment / Total Cost of Ownership.
By Marcus Ting-A-Kee at 9/27/2006 12:13:00 PM
Labels: disaster recovery, non-functional, portfolio management, requirements
On September 13, I had the opportunity to attend a Power Within speaking engagement being held in Toronto. The event looked very promising with speakers such as Micheal Eisner, Sir Richard Branson and Tim Sanders taking part. You can see the full details about the session here.
Micheal Eisner's speech on management was very interesting. He spoke about how Disney used inside-the-box thinking to spur creativity and innovation for their entertainment initiatives. This may sound contrary to the outside-the-box paradigm that is prevalent now, but what Mr. Eisner meant was that for a given project you must understand the size of the box (e.g., amount of resources and money you will devote to it) and innovate, manage and be creative within those confines. He used clips from movies such as Who Framed Roger Rabbit, The Lion King, Outrageous Fortune and Pirates of the Caribbean - Dead Man's Chest to illustrate his points. The complexity concerning things one would not give much thought to was astounding. The example shown was the shading on Roger Rabbit's character while a overhead light swung back and forth (the picture is courtesy of Disney via Google.) This was something that was extremely challenging to perform at that time.
Tim Sanders was a former motivational coach at Yahoo! Mr. Sanders was an engaging speaker and talked about what he termed the, "likability factor." The basic premise is that people who are more likable are more prone to succeed versus an equally competent but less likable individual. He reasoning (backed up by lots of research) was as follows:
By Marcus Ting-A-Kee at 9/23/2006 03:13:00 PM
Labels: innovation, leadership, presentations
Here's an interesting webinar, How to Harness Emerging Technologies to Boost the Bottom Line, from Ziff Davis.
Why do innovative companies find benefits from emerging technologies that others overlook? How do their IT teams use new technologies to create products and services and add value for customers? How do they help drive business innovation and keep competitors at bay?View it on-demand here.
What are the steps involved in aligning projects to a strategy?
By Marcus Ting-A-Kee at 9/19/2006 09:11:00 PM
Labels: alignment, portfolio management, strategy
There's an upcoming webinar that maybe of interest.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006, 2:00 pm Eastern, 11:00 am PacificTap into the power of Agile software development with Dr. Alistair Cockburn, one of the forefathers of the Agile movement, and learn important risk-reducing strategies for your projects. Developing executable code that offers business value is the heart of project delivery, and using tools that support the collaboration and distillation of business rules and requirements into automated test suites is imperative. Fergal McGovern, originator of Optimal Trace, the leading Requirements Definition and Management Tool, will outline how a structured approach accelerates successful project delivery.
Continuing on from my post, Why prioritize projects?, prioritization is important because,
By Marcus Ting-A-Kee at 9/12/2006 08:26:00 PM
Labels: communication, economics, portfolio management
There's a post on Techrepublic titled, Project Managers: Stop "gathering" IT requirements.' It's an interesting read.And when I ask why projects get bad requirements, the answers are, "Users won't tell us what they want," or "We don't ask good questions," or "What they told us they wanted turned out not to be what they really wanted." But I think that the problem is more subtle than any of those answers.
The author, Paul Glen's, point is that, "project managers should negotiate requirements among the stakeholders." My comments on the article are as follows:
By Marcus Ting-A-Kee at 9/07/2006 09:40:00 PM
Labels: business analysis, portfolio management, project management
Projects are initiated to capitalize on opportunities (the Chinese character for crisis is the same as opportunity I've been told) that a company faces. However, not all projects are created equal.
To quote George Orwell's Animal Farm, "All animals are created equal, but some are more equal than others." Some projects are more beneficial than others.
Prioritizing projects is very much like managing investments. In fact, it is the same. How likely are you to perform due diligence before making an investment decision such as buying a bond?
You need to understand:
By Marcus Ting-A-Kee at 9/06/2006 07:36:00 PM
Labels: economics, portfolio management, program management
We've all encountered situations where difficult decisions had to be made concerning a project.
The basic economic problem which arises from people having unlimited wants while there are and always will be limited resources. Because of scarcity, various economic decisions must be made to allocate resources efficiently.(Investopedia.com)It's true, you just can't do everything!
The art and science of making decisions about investment mix and policy, matching investments to objectives, asset allocation for individuals and institutions, and balancing risk vs. performance.Expanding further upon the concept of program-wide decision-making is the notion that decisions across a portfolio can have implications in many of the different programs within it. A portfolio is governed by the higher level strategic goals of a company whereas program decisions are governed by lower level objectives.
By Marcus Ting-A-Kee at 9/03/2006 09:57:00 PM
Labels: economics, portfolio management, program management, project management, projects
Doing some housekeeping on my blog.
Figuring out the hard way what works and doesn't work with Blogger's new Beta.