Capability Maturity vs. Work on Proposals: Difference between revisions
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I am just a single struggling worker so I am forced to spend no more time on a lead than a rational expectation of closing and completing a job indicates is justified. Necessarily there will be some failures and some potential good clients will be lost. I started my professional programming career as a junior employee of a conglomerate that was working as a subcontractor to IBM in the acquisition and award phase of a contract that spanned more than a year. | I am just a single struggling worker so I am forced to spend no more time on a lead than a rational expectation of closing and completing a job indicates is justified. Necessarily there will be some failures and some potential good clients will be lost. I started my professional programming career as a junior employee of a conglomerate that was working as a subcontractor to IBM in the acquisition and award phase of a contract that spanned more than a year. <br/> I am risk averse and I also am loathe to perform work in this Era where one must work very fast in requirements analysis and design for nothing. This doesn't mean I won't do it, but the capital entity requesting such unpaid service must be such that I can be reasonably sanguine about the aforementioned expectation. | ||
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The second is so-called </html>[[:en:Capability Maturity Model|Capability Maturity (CMM)]] and its [[:en:Antipattern|antipattern]]<html> CIMM , which has to do with the reliablity of estimates in CMM Level I situations. | The second is so-called </html>[[:en:Capability Maturity Model|Capability Maturity (CMM)]] and its [[:en:Antipattern|antipattern]]<html> CIMM , which has to do with the reliablity of estimates in CMM Level I situations. | ||
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Of course the lack of adequate requirements and design is the penultimate root cause of failure in software development projects (the ultimate being the universal failure of responsibility). | |||
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Revision as of 01:42, 21 January 2011
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