- +
Ticked Off at Tick the Box Mentality 04 February, 2008 13:01:15
Does your executive search firm know the difference between an MIS manager and a CIO, and if it does, can it explain that difference to its corporate clients?Does your executive search firm know its MIS managers from its elbow? Does it even know the difference between an MIS manager and a CIO, and if it does, can it explain that difference to its corporate clients? - +
Strategies for Dealing With IT Complexity 24 December, 2007 10:30:47
Every innovation, every business process improvement, comes with an IT complexity tax that must be paid by CIOs in time, money and sweat. Here are strategies to mitigate the increasing complexity of IT as it enables new business.Every innovation, every business process improvement, comes with an IT complexity tax that must be paid by CIOs in time, money and sweat. Here are strategies to mitigate the increasing complexity of IT as it enables new business. - +
When Egos Dare 05 June, 2007 10:17:02
For some observers and practitioners, the federated model brings the best elements of centralization and decentralization to the IT table. Others aren’t so sure . . .The monarch was dead. Demoralized and shaken, the organization spent time mourning for a popular and high-profile CIO who had reigned for many years. Then, with time starting to dull the pain, the young princes began sharpening their knives, sensing their best opportunity in years to seize power - +
Getting Clueful: Five Things CIOs Should Know About Software Requirements 03 April, 2007 12:37:05
Software requirements documentation was supposed to itemize everything that the application required. But the project was late, the users were unhappy, and the budget spun out of control. Why? Just ask the developersSome days, you wish you had telepathy. You just know that your development staff is holding back in some way, but you don't know how to get them to communicate. Is the project in trouble, but they're afraid to tell you? - +
The Meaning of Success 05 February, 2007 13:32:46
Part 3 of a Three-Part Examination of Project Management Missing LinksAs companies become wiser about recognizing and adopting successful project management approaches, they face the challenge of creating an environment that fosters success — but that means first defining what success means to the organization
- +
VoIP disrupts national security efforts 23 June, 2006 07:40:00
Australian VoIP service providers must keep interception channels open for law enforcement following a legislative review which IT Minister Helen Coonan has endorsed. - +
The seven deadly sins of outsourcing 21 June, 2006 11:41:21
These are the transgressions that can doom you to outsourcing hell. Here's how to avoid them. - +
How to build a vendor scorecard 21 June, 2006 09:58:09
Whether new to a company or making a list of your suppliers based on their performance and importance to you, a scorecard will not only help but will be a record to share with colleagues. - +
How top employers keep IT staffers happy 20 June, 2006 11:42:30
"In some form, our IT group has been around for 50 years," says Jean Delaney Nelson, vice president and CIO at Securian Financial Group. "And we've never laid off an employee." - +
Accept failure, but focus on recovery 08 June, 2006 15:45:27
Armando Fox believes that, if you can't build fail-proof systems, you should at least build systems that can recover so quickly that service blips become negligible. A Research Associate with the University of California Berkeley's Reliable, Adaptive Distributed systems laboratory (RAD Lab), Fox was one of the leads on the joint Berkeley/Stanford Recovery-Oriented Computing (ROC) Project that investigated techniques for building dependable Internet services that emphasized "recovery from failures rather than failure-avoidance."
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services. The Secrets of C-Suite Success
SOA Governance: Rule your SOA
EMC Solutions for Databases Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Nseries iSCSI
A Guide to Next-Generation Backup, Recovery and Archive
The State of Internet Security
Extending Business Solutions across the Organisation
How to Protect Business from Malware at the Endpoint and the Perimeter
Growth Strategies in Uncertain Times: Building and Maintaining Lasting Client Relationships in Professional Services Organisations
Newsletter Subscription
Impressive Deception
Wishful thinking - and practices that lead project teams to "lie" in estimation tools like earned value management (EVM) - can lead projects into serious strife. RNC Global Projects managing director Diane Dromgold has seen plenty of projects fail or need resuscitating because the project manager was relying on misleading metrics and measures to assess progress.
In one company making a high-tech product, for example, all the metrics and measures looked great even as the project slid ever faster backwards. Dromgold says the project manager would get everyone together every week and they would record the update. No one noticed that while they were spending much time and regularly updating percentages of completion, there was no actual progression.
"In fact in one month the project slipped by the entire month and the metrics couldn't tell that," she says. "The moral of the story? There is no better harbourer of delusions than the estimates of 'percentages complete'. An entire team can rejoice as the project inches ever closer to 100, despite any evidence the actual work has progressed."
However, Dromgold's favourite story concerns EVM, thanks to which, one project manager proudly told her, his team at any given time knew exactly where they were a month previous. Now, that might not have been too much of a worry, she says, except that they based their assessment on the qualitative data of progress applied against the quantitative data of money spent. In one project where her review eventually triggered project cancellation, the project manager was able to show her "the most beautiful metrics", which showed progress perfectly matched the time and money spent.
The bottom line was a $6 million gap between money spent and what the project manager was reporting, and finally, devastation for the project manager and cancellation of the project.
"It's quite sad that we have allowed project management to become an accounting practice without the benefit of sound accounting principles or the ability to recognize and report on reality," she says.
Lie Like a Dog
It is so easy for project members to deceive themselves and others partly because seemingly watertight methodologies for software estimation and resultant metrics or measures are anything but.
Take earned value analysis (EVA). While the naive treat its readings as gospel, EVA is not a science, or even necessarily the most appropriate tool for every IT project. As research firm Gartner points out in a report entitled What Every Government IT Professional Should Know About Earned Value Management, effective use of EVA needs understanding, experience and commonsense application.
Applied effectively, EVA yields earlier and better visibility into program performance than non-integrated methods of planning and control. But Gartner finds a proven track record in large government capital projects (such as construction, weapon systems and aerospace systems development) has made EVA neither well known nor understood among government IT professionals, for instance.
Cutter Consortium senior consultant Steven Kursh also promotes EVA as enabling managers to track - and respond suitably to - metrics on cost and performance about the calendar, milestones and budgets. However, the simple fact is, earned value can lie like a dog. Kursh says the tool, like all tools, can be manipulated and used improperly. He says the other tools available as a substitute all suffer from the same weakness: "The difference is between what works in theory and what can be screwed up in execution."
"You can manipulate EV," agrees Manfred Thurow, CIO at Telstra's KAZ subsidiary. "I have seen a software development and integration project coded green the first week and green every week after that for the entire life of the project. Yet, the project was a failure. It was late; it blew the budget, and delivered nothing usable to the internal business customer."
Thurow says it is easy to fudge EV by:
- Rebaselining the project. The project manager waits until a scope change or other change request, and uses that as an excuse to redo the project schedule. The project instantly turns green because actual progress now matches expected progress.
- Pushing problem tasks forward. Putting the easiest tasks at the beginning of the project and the hardest tasks at the end can keep a project green for a long time.
- Padding the schedule.
- Bumping up the task completion percentages. For example, when measures say a task is 20 percent or 80 percent complete, who can objectively tell? Changing the completion percentage of any subjective task will help the earned value numbers.
2008 CIO Summit
19th August, 2008 Four Seasons Hotel, Sydney Developed in partnership with CIO Magazine, IDC, INTEP and the CIO Executive Council.
The world of the CIO is extremely complex and diverse. Multiple priorities demand attention and decisions are needed instantly. Individual teams need to be driven towards common goals, and businesses strive to become more mobile, agile and responsive. For CIOs, the challenge never ends.
Every year the CIO Summit identifies what is top of mind for CIOs across Australia and New Zealand, and offers insight for CIO benchmarking and vendor strategic planning alike.
Recent IDC research shows that over 59% of CIO's believe that 'to achieve their business strategies, technology should be used more aggressively than today.'
Join us on August 19th to discover how this is possible with the latest technologies including Virtualisation, Web 2.0, IP Surveillance and Software as a Service (Saas).
Click here for more information.
Please email Denyse_Robertson@idg.com.au for further information.
- +
CIO Live Podcast #79: Brent D Taylor, author of The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires Part II 05 October, 2007 06:00:00
For his new book, The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires, social researcher Brent D Taylor spent four years of intensive research investigating the psychological make-up and backgrounds of some of the world's richest men and women, including IT luminaries Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and Steve Jobs. Taylor discovered that, despite working in different industries and coming from different upbringings, they all have one thing in common -- they are all outsiders. - +
CIO Live Podcast #78: Brent D Taylor, author of The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires 28 September, 2007 17:34:25
For his new book, The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires, social researcher Brent D Taylor spent four years of intensive research investigating the psychological make-up and backgrounds of some of the world's richest men and women, including IT luminaries Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and Steve Jobs. Taylor discovered that, despite working in different industries and coming from different upbringings, they all have one thing in common -- they are all outsiders. - +
CIO Live Podcast #77: Panasonic Speeds Up Trans-Pacific File Transfers, Part III 21 September, 2007 07:00:00
Part three in our three-part special report from CIO's sister publication Network World in the US, as Paul Desmond reports from the Network World IT Roadmap Conference in Santa Clara, California. With development teams in the US and Japan, Panasonic needed a more efficient way to move very large files between the two locations. Iben Rodriguez, IT consultant for Panasonic Research and Development, explains how a storage-area network and virtual server technology helped speed up WAN performance. - +
CIO Live Podcast #76: Panasonic Speeds Up Trans-Pacific File Transfers, Part II 14 September, 2007 07:00:00
Part two in our three-part special report from CIO's sister publication Network World in the US, as Paul Desmond reports from the Network World IT Roadmap Conference in Santa Clara, California. With development teams in the US and Japan, Panasonic needed a more efficient way to move very large files between the two locations. Iben Rodriguez, IT consultant for Panasonic Research and Development, explains how a storage-area network and virtual server technology helped speed up WAN performance. - +
CIO Live Podcast #75: Panasonic Speeds Up Trans-Pacific File Transfers, Part I 07 September, 2007 07:00:05
Part one in our three-part special report from CIO's sister publication Network World in the US, as Paul Desmond reports from the Network World IT Roadmap Conference in Santa Clara, California. With development teams in the US and Japan, Panasonic needed a more efficient way to move very large files between the two locations. Iben Rodriguez, IT consultant for Panasonic Research and Development, explains how a storage-area network and virtual server technology helped speed up WAN performance.
- +
'I have a lost laptop horror story for you' 30 June, 2008 10:08:14
The devil of identity theft is in the details that follow...The devil of identity theft is in the details that follow: Russ Jones tells a tale of woe that isn't particularly dramatic -- or rare -- and yet it's exactly the kind of story that worries me enough to ignore my better judgment and buy identity-theft protection from my insurance provider. - +
SQL attacks lobs onto pro tennis site 02 July, 2008 11:52:19
Wimbledon perfect time for crook's criminal racket.Visitors to the Association of Tennis Professionals Web site have potentially been infected with spyware after apparent lax security allowed a malicious script to be injected across its pages. - +
Hacking tools: A new version of BackTrack helps ethical hackers 30 June, 2008 10:57:21
BackTrack is the quickest way to get access to hundreds of (legal) hacking toolsVersion 3.0 of BackTrack has been released. BackTrack is a Linux-based distribution dedicated to penetration testing or hacking (depending on how you look at it). It contains more than 300 of the world's most popular open source or freely distributable hacking tools. - +
Japanese military loses data again 02 July, 2008 08:17:21
Japan's Self Defense Force lost sensitive data on joint US-Japan military exerciseJapan's Self Defense Force lost sensitive data pertaining to a joint US-Japan military exercise last year, the Ministry of Defense said Tuesday. - +
ACLU, EFF sue US gov't over mobile phone tracking 03 July, 2008 08:37:23
Two civil liberties groups sue the US Department of Justice over mobile phone trackingThe American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) are asking a federal court to order the US Department of Justice to turn over records about the agency's tracking of mobile phone users.
Ballarat Grammar Improves Student Access to Computer Based Learning with HP ProCurve 04 July, 2008 16:49:00
Media release: 40 Per Cent of Australian Businesses Do Not Validate Their Data 04 July, 2008 10:29:00
Kaseya helps turbo charge BlueFire’s service delivery model 03 July, 2008 17:23:00
Computershare Selects Symantec for Data Loss Prevention Globally 03 July, 2008 14:52:00
DST International moves to new Shanghai office 03 July, 2008 13:21:00
|
||
|
||
|
|
||
|
The IP Storage payoff: Turning your investment into efficient, affordable results
Recent advances in IP-based storage technologies leverage existing technology and staff to easily and cost-effectively build and maintain sophisticated storage networks. Discover the solutions to your data storage challenges with IP storage.









