The Software Project Manager's Handbook: Principles That Work at Work, 2nd EditionISBN: 978-0-471-67420-7
Paperback
504 pages
July 2004, Wiley-IEEE Computer Society Press
This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 10-15 days delivery time. The book is not returnable.
|
Part 1.
1 What Makes a Good Software Manager?
1.1 People Perspective.
1.2 Business Perspective.
1.3 Process Perspective.
1.4 Key Thoughts in This Chapter.
References.
2 Four Basics That Work.
2.1 People, Process, and Product.
2.2 Visibility.
2.3 Configuration Management.
2.4 Standards.
2.5 Key Thoughts in This Chapter.
References.
3 What Doesn’t Work and Why.
3.1 When the 3Ps Are Out of Balance.
3.2 When There’s Not Enough Visibility.
3.3 When Configuration Management is Missing or Abused.
3.4 When Standards are Dismissed.
3.5 Key Thoughts in This Chapter.
Reference.
4 Managing a Project Day by Day.
4.1 Balancing the 3Ps to Create a Good Environment.
4.2 Visibility: Project Control in a Simple Equation.
4.3 CM: Managing Baselines with Milestones.
4.4 Looking to Standards for Help.
4.5 Key Thoughts in This Chapter.
References.
Part 2.
5 Requirements.
5.1 Balancing the 3Ps: Requirements Analysis, Documentation, and Management.
5.2 Visibility: Making Requirements Known.
5.3 Using CM.
5.4 Using Standards.
5.5 Key Thoughts in this Chapter.
References.
6 Planning.
6.1 Elements of a Good Plan.
6.2 Balancing the 3Ps: Selecting the Process.
6.3 Making the Project Visible: Planning Techniques.
6.4 Making the Project Visible: Estimating Techniques.
6.5 Configuration Management.
6.6 Standards.
6.7 Key Thoughts in this Chapter.
References.
7 Risk Management.
7.1 A Task Overview.
7.2 Balancing The 3Ps: Uncertainty and Choice.
7.3 Making Risk Visible.
7.4 Other Ways to Manage Risk.
7.5 Configuration Management.
7.6 Using Standards.
7.7 Key Thoughts in this Chapter.
References.
Part 3.
8 Design.
8.1 The Challenge of the 3Ps.
8.2 Visibility—Expressing the Design.
8.3 Design in the Code.
8.4 Design and Process.
8.5 Designing with COTS.
8.6 Configuration Management.
8.7 Standards: Writing the SDD.
8.8 Key Thoughts in this Chapter.
References.
9 Integration and Testing.
9.1 Some I&T Myths.
9.2 Managing the 3Ps: People.
9.3 Managing the 3Ps: Process.
9.4 Visibility: Testing Techniques and Details.
9.5 Configuration Management.
9.6 Standards: Documenting the Test Plan.
9.7 Key Thoughts in this Chapter.
References.
10 Software Maintenance.
10.1 What is Maintenance.
10.2 Balancing the 3Ps: Managing the Maintainers.
10.3 Balancing the 3Ps: Managing the Process.
10.4 Balancing the 3Ps: Making the Most of the Product.
10.5 Visibility: Understanding the Maintenance Stages.
10.6 Configuration Management.
10.7 Using Standards.
10.8 Key Thoughts in this Chapter.
References.
Part 4.
11 Cookbook.
11.1 Essentials.
11.2 Opt: A Waterfall Project.
11.3 System Upgrade: An Evolutionary Project.
11.4 CTRAN: A Spiral Project.
11.5 Other Software Projects.
11.6 Key Thoughts in this Chapter.
References.
Appendix A Documents for the OPT Project.
A.1 OPT Executive Sponsor Memorandum.
A.2 OPT Project Context Document.
A.3 OPT Configuration Management Plan.
A.4 OPT Concept of Operations.
A.5 OPT Software Requirements Specification.
A.6 OPT Software Project Management Plan.
A.7 OPT Software Design Description.
Appendix B Configuration Management.
B.1 Will The Real CM Please Stand Up?
B.2 The Main Ingredients.
B.3 Baselines.
B.4 CM Activities.
B.5 CM People.
B.6 CM Plan.
B.7 A CM Sketch.
B.8 Summary.
References.
Appendix C Structured Analysis and Design.
C.1 Structured Analysis.
C.2 Structured Design.
References.
Appendix D Annotated Bibliography.
D.1 Process.
D.2 Visibility.
D.3 People.
D.4 Journals.
Index.
About the Author.