Cost of Delay

אירוע Agile 2015, שלישי, 9 ביוני 2015, 13:10

Quantifying Cost of Delay: Why is it the “one thing” to quantify? How do I do it? Don Reinertsen says that if you only quantify one thing, quantify the Cost of Delay. As we’ve talked about before, quantifying Cost of Delay not only helps improve prioritisation, it also help with making trade-off decisions, creates a sense of urgency, and changes the focus of the conversation. Maybe this has got you interested in experimenting with it, but you’re not sure how to get started? If so, this workshop is specifically for you! When people hear about Cost of Delay they sometimes doubt whether their organisation is ready for it. They say things like, “We don’t have the maturity for it”, or “We couldn’t do that because our stakeholders wouldn’t support it”. We’ve heard people say this too. And yet, in hindsight, people find it much easier than they thought! We will show you how to get started with using Cost of Delay, despite these doubts. Building blocks The first essential building block is to understand the value. To help structure the conversation we will use a simple economic framework to surface the assumptions and drive to the economic impacts. The second essential building block is to understand the urgency. For this, we will look at different urgency curves to help us understand how value is likely to decay over time. Combining these two gives us the Cost of Delay helping us to question and better understand what our gut tells us about value and urgency

Joshua Arnold

Joshua Arnold

Innovation & Transformation

Black Swan Farming

With a background in fluid mechanics and systems engineering, I have worked for the past decade with various organisations to improve their systems of innovation and software delivery. In particular, I have focused on the problem of prioritisation and portfolio management, helping to bring the fuzzy-front-end of development into focus and aligned toward faster time-to-market and improved return on investment. I recently co-authored an IEEE paper called “Black Swan Farming” on the use of Cost of Delay across a $100m p.a. portfolio at a Fortune 500 company. I share some thoughts on innovation and tilting the playing field at blackswanfarming.com I have had the privilege of speaking at LESS2012, Agile2013, XPDay, LKNA14, Agile2014 and other international conferences, where I share my experience and thoughts about how to discover, nurture and speed up the delivery of value. While I've been based in London for 12 years and worked with people and teams all over the globe, I can't seem to shake my native New Zealand accent. I'm most happy when I'm wearing a rubber suit, riding a moving wall of water

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