Tech

Guides
 

Survey: Developer metrics too complicated

By Colin Barker, ZDNet UK
Friday, December 14, 2007 09:49 AM

Metrics for judging the success of application-development projects are too complex for many organizations to understand, according to a survey commissioned by software firm Borland and carried out by Forrester Consulting.

The survey was conducted among the heads of application-development projects at 20 companies, all of which had revenues in excess of US$1 billion per year.

Borland's director of solutions marketing, Andy Seager, said: "Everyone is agreed we need metrics to understand projects because a good many IT [departments] simply don't know what to deliver."

According to the research, two factors "conspire to deter application-development organizations from attempting to improve their metrics programs". The first factor is the cost and complexity involved in collecting data for the metrics; and the second factor is over-reliance on what Forrester calls "superficial metrics".

"The lack of in-flight project metrics that really describe the work being performed on a project is a major fault of most application-development metrics programs," said the report.

To add to the problem, it is a fault that "most [IT departments] aren't even aware of", the report continued. "Without metrics about business value, application-development organizations are unable to communicate with their customers about their contributions to the bottom line or even prioritize the work in a way that makes real business sense."

Organizations sometimes do not get the right metrics in the first place because of the level of work involved in getting hold of them, according to the report. "The number-one obstacle to gathering meaningful metrics is the manual effort involved. Nearly half of the companies Forrester interviewed cited this as a challenge, and several of the companies reported that they spend nearly a third of their time on metrics collection," the report said.

In addition to these issues, the report added: "Development organizations struggle with the technical complexities involved in the trending and aggregation of metrics--where the bulk of the value of measurement is found."



WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

  • Enterprise 2.0

    Vince Casarez, vice president of product management at Oracle, explains how Web 2.0 technologies, such as tags, wikis, and mash-ups, can be applied within an organization.
    Play video


  • Nehalem Architecture

    What makes next-generation Intel® Microarchitecture (Nehalem) such a superior successor?
    Play video

Whitepapers/Case Studies

Downloads

Business Applications News

 
Adapt to rapidly changing IT workloads
Get superior performance on demand and better energy usage.
» Ultimate virtualization blade
» Scalable SAN solution
» Accelerate service delivery
Your complete guide to successful CRM
Discover how Oracle’s proven solutions deliver built-in best practices to increase sales, marketing & service effectiveness.


» Download your free CRM eBooks by Oracle now





Tech Jobs Now!

Tags

  1. benefit
  2. budgeting / cost control
  3. business strategies & functions
  4. china
  5. cio
  6. environment
  7. financial
  8. hardware
  9. india
  10. industry
  11. information technology
  12. infrastructure / architecture management
  13. it outsourcing
  14. job
  15. leadership
  16. outsourcing
  17. revenue
  18. software
  19. strategy
  20. web