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® IBM Software Group © 2006 IBM Corporation PRJ480 Mastering the Management of Iterative Development v2 Module 6: Phase Management -Transition
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6-2 Module 6 Objectives As a project progresses through phases and iterations, Describe the changing emphasis of Project Management by: Understanding Transition objectives, milestones, and evaluation criteria. Understanding principal Transition activities and artifacts and their uses. Understanding team considerations regarding delivering the product to end users.
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6-3 Transition Primary Objectives: Achieving user self-supportability Achieving stakeholder concurrence that deployment baselines are complete and consistent with the evaluation criteria of the vision Achieving final product baselines as rapidly and cost-effectively as practical Essential Activities: Synchronization and integration of concurrent construction increments into consistent deployment baselines Deployment-specific engineering Assessment of deployment baselines against the complete vision and acceptance criteria in the requirements set
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6-4 Optional Transition Activities Transition could include any of the following activities: Beta testing to validate the new system against user expectations Beta testing and parallel operation relative to a legacy system it is replacing Conversion of operational databases Training of users and maintainers
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6-5 Transition Considerations Phase Focus Deployment plans End user support material Create product release Make product available to end users Fine-tune product based on feedback
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6-6 Transition Considerations Measurements Progress100% Expenditures (rate)High StaffingVarying StabilityStable Modularity5%-10% AdaptabilityBenign MaturityRobust
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6-7 Transition Iteration Planning It is likely that the number of betas used will determine the number of Transition iterations. Each Transition iteration requires planning and tracking the artifacts that compose the beta or final release.
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6-8 Transition Essential Artifacts The Product Build User Support Material Implementation Elements Optional Artifacts Test Suite ("smoke test") “Shrinkwrap” Product Packaging
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6-9 RUP Distribution of Skills by Phase Management Environment/CM Requirements Design Implementation Assessment Deployment Total Transition % 14 5 4 4 19 24 30 100 Percentage of effort by activity for Transition phase.
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6-10 Transition Evaluation Criteria Is the user satisfied? Are actual resource expenditures versus planned expenditures acceptable?
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6-11 Transition Phase Management Issues Falling victim to your own success Requests for new functionality
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6-12 Transition Phase Recommendations The easiness of this phase will be proportional to: The quality of the product The degree to which the user has been prepared Don’t move all your developers to another project at the end of Construction. All but the simplest products require some form of user training. Give adequate attention to the ease of installation. A difficult installation can destroy user confidence in a product.
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6-13 Discussion: Characteristics of Transition What are expected characteristics of the project during Transition? What are activities that need emphasis during Transition?
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6-14 Module 6 Review The main objective of Transition is to successfully transition the product to a satisfied user. The number of betas will likely determine the number of iterations. Essential artifacts are: Iteration Plan/Iteration Assessment (Project Manager) The Product Build (Architect)
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