February 7, 2008: Alderon Had Weapons of Mass Destruction

One of the things that I love about working in Information Technology is that, unlike many other fields, we are less of a study in our own right but more of an application of knowledge and processes from myriad different disciplines.  Few fields have so much opportunity for breadth, variety and intellectual adventure.  I mention this because I came across an article that was pointed out to me by one of my classmates in a project management course that I am taking right now.  This is an article from Psychology Today and yet tied in with technical risk management discussions that we have been having.  Ten Way We Get the Odds Wrong.  Very good reading on societies inability to handle risk well.

Today was my stay at home day.  Oreo was very tired and slept all day.  There was little sun though so he didn’t get to enjoy his sunspot like he normally does.

Today was quite busy and I was tied to the desk all day.  I barely had time to get ready what with walking the dog and feeding him and getting dressed and everything else.  Dominica was home at twenty till six and our dinner reservations at the Theater Square Grill were at six.  We made it over just in time for our prix fixe dinner.  Dominica had truffle infused polenta and I went for the arctic char which was excellent.

The timing was perfect and it was right in from dinner to the show – which is all in the same building at NJPAC.  We claimed our season tickets, up on the second tier which is rather high but not too bad in Prudential Hall and went off to find our seats.

The seating organization was a disaster and the theater was just telling people to “sit anywhere” even though we all bought assigned seats.  It was really bad.  At one point there were only two people in the entire second tier and they were in our two seats!  What are the chances of that?  And every person who came in after us either took someone else’s seat or had to sit elsewhere because their seat was taken.  I am not sure if a single person made it in and got to sit in their own seats.  Why they felt the need to seat people in places other than their ticketed seats I have no idea.

The show, The Wedding Singer, was pretty good.  The cast was quite good and the venue is a good one.  I wasn’t thrilled with the music and the storyline was changed from the movie in some corny ways that I thought were unnecessary.  The original story was better.  And for some reason they decided to make the musical a bit more adult oriented (i.e. not appropriate for children not “more intelligent”) than the movie and for no apparent reason.  But overall it was a good show and we had a good time.  And it is so easy to get to and from the theatre.

Our season tickets also give us a chance to go see My Fair Lady, Moving Out and Riverdance yet this season.  We are also talking about going to see Yo-Yo Ma and Pink Martini in concert – but not the same concert.  One night apart from each other.  I discovered Pink Martini a few months ago through Amazon’s “if you like so and so then you will probably like Pink Martini” service.

Once we got back home Dominica was right off to bed.  I stayed up for several hours working on my RIT homework.  Best to get it done so that it isn’t hanging over my head tomorrow.

February 6, 2008: Wonderful Wednesday

I was exhausted when the alarm went off this morning. It is amazing that I even woke up. I have no memory of having actually heard the alarm at all.

Today is exceptionally warm for early February in New Jersey. It was warm enough when I left for the office that I didn’t even bother to take a jacket with me.

I managed to squeeze in taking the Network Monitoring exam from Brainbench today and scored a Masters. I managed to tie for the twenty-ninth in the world ranking, eleventh in the United States ranking and am alone at number one in New Jersey by a fair margin including being New Jersey’s only master holder.

I didn’t really get lunch today. I grabbed a falafel from across the street and some French fries and ate at my desk while I worked. Today was quite a busy day and I was just running from one thing to another all day long.

I ended up working a little long today just because there was so much going on. But we have nothing scheduled tonight so this is my chance to do some homework and to relax. Dominica should be doing homework as well.

My current class at RIT has a semester paper due in a few weeks where we have to talk at length about the project management process for the designing and building of the RMS Titanic. I thought that this was a very cool coincidence since my office in Belfast is in Whitestar House, the office where Whitestar Lines designed and oversaw the building of the Titanic who was drydocked just outside the windows. So it is just neat to be writing about a major historical project done in an office where I have worked. I looked online and found a site with good pics of the office in Belfast that includes a picture of the actual office space where I worked. You can see where I sat in the back corner as well.

Dominica cooked dinner tonight.  It was eggplant and couscous.  We watched Family Guy’s Blue Harvest while we ate.  It was short and after that we decided that we just wanted to relax so we watched Jhoom Barabar Jhoom which got weak reviews at the office but we enjoyed it.

Dominica went right to bed from there but I had some homework that had to be done before I could call it a night.  I fed Oreo, did my homework and then went to bed.  Tomorrow is doggie-daddy day and I will be working from home.  Oreo was tired this morning and is ready to spend a day sleeping.  Tomorrow night Dominica and I are going to NJPAC to see a musical.  We have season tickets now and this will be our first time getting to use them.

February 5, 2008: Super Tuesday

Check out the Tron Guy. He is available to speak at your next convention.

Today is an amazingly warm day. Warm and wet. We are expected to hit fifty-seven degrees Fahrenheit this afternoon but the day is supposed to be heavy rain all day as well.

I stopped in at Airlie on my way in and picked up my breakfast. Then I walked into work. I was a bit too warm having warm just a fleece. I kind of wish that I hadn’t brought a jacket at all today.

New York City was a mess today with increased traffic as there is a big ticker-tape parade (read: litter party) to celebrate the American football workers union of New Jersey beating out the Boston office in the NFL’s inter-office competition. The streets were full of crazed lunatics prepared to get inebriated and trash the city. Getting to the office was a pain due to the presence of lallygaggers getting in the way and making even foot traffic grind to a halt.

I went to lunch at one of the halal trucks on Wall Street with some friends from the office. While we were out getting our food there were a couple of guys in Giants uniforms standing on the street selling bottle of Budweiser for one dollar per bottle. They were screaming up and down the sidewalk trying to get buyers. Very strange.

We thought that it was going to be raining when I headed for home but the rain held off and I had a nice walk home. It was quite warm. Very unseasonable.

The original plan had been to play Dungeons and Dragons tonight but our dungeon master was not available tonight so we had the evening free. So we called around and Ryan, Pam and Kevin met us over at Sculley’s Publick House for dinner.

We had the last of our older Amazon order come in today which included two movies: Bride and Prejudice and Jhoom Barabar Jhoom.  We also had an eBay package arrive which included the Dungeons and Dragons resources Complete Warrior and Complete Arcane.

After dinner everyone came by and enjoyed some Abita beer that Ryan brought up from his trip to New Orleans.  We didn’t stay up late though.  Everyone has to be up early tomorrow.

Non-Measurable Organizational Value

In addition to the concept of the Measurable Organizational Value or MOV metric that I discussed several days ago, I believe that we need to look at its contrary “metric” – Non-Measurable Organizational Value or NMOV.

Non-Measurable Organizational Value is the concept of corporate benefit being derived from a project that is inherently non-measurable. To some degree all value is difficult if not impossible to measure accurately except in extreme circumstance. Organizations are complex entities and any project or process is just one of many projects or processes that all contribute in some way to value.

Let us look at a quick example of a difficult to measure project. Project X at ABC Corporation (they give all of their projects letter-names for some reason) is a project to add four important new features to one of the company’s software products. The project runs its course and is estimated to have cost the company almost exactly $100K to complete. The new features are now available in the product which is available to existing customers as a free upgrade and are included in the shipping product to all new customers. Now we must determine the Organizational Value or OV of these new features.

These new features are designed to derive their organizational value from several planned sources. The first source is through “feature marketing“. In this capacity we are left attempting to derive, generally, through collected sales data both before and after project completion what the change in sales is because of the new, added feature. This has to be balanced against any changes in sales or marketing, changing market pressures, increased product maturity, changes in competing products, etc. Even asking customers to voluntarily report on this data can be very misleading in the best of circumstances.

The second source of derived organizational value is through customer retention. This is far more difficult to calculate than the somewhat ephemeral marketing and sales aspect of the first source. To some degree you can calculate the number or percentage of customers who decide to go through the upgrade process if they are downloading the update from ABC’s web site. But you are still left estimating what percentage of customers did the upgrade simply because they felt that they should use the latest version, who wanted to get the features but would not have switched products to get them and which customers would actually have taken the effort to switch to another product to acquire those features.

This approach does not consider the market affects that ABC’s new features have had on its competitors. In some cases by supplying in-demand new features ABC may have driven the market forward forcing competitors to include those same features, but it may also have done research and development that now its competitors can copy at lower cost. Or perhaps it has implemented features so costly or specialized in nature that competing products avoid implementing those same features simply because they are already available on the market. Estimating ABC’s market effect is very difficult if not impossible.

The third source of revenue is difficult to calculate as well. This third source is through market preparation. By this I mean that two of these four features implemented by ABC Company are building blocks that are expected to lead into another project that will provide a number of really incredible and difficult to produce features in another year. A certain amount of planning and framework design was done during this project in order to prepare for the following project. A few hundred hours of manpower were put into this robust framework that would have been excessive for just the current features but will allow future features to be added in more easily. This technology investment will not see dividends until other projects, seeking their own organizational value calculations, are layered on top of it.

In this example of ABC’s Project X we see that this project was based mostly upon Non-Measurable Organizational Value. Some of these value sources could be examined and an estimate of OV could be extracted. But this is, at best, guesstimation and the organization would need a very carefully managed process to keep this type of guesstimating consistent and fair between projects. But there are other NMOV concepts that we should also address.

One type of NMOV is employee morale and the related “development velocity.” Employees, especially technical workers, are highly affected by their work environments and generally desire to be allowed to produce good products. Developers and analysts will often state that the value and quality of their work is a driving factor in their level of job and career satisfaction. A company with high morale, satisfaction and happiness will generally get better products and it will get them out the door faster. Teams are more likely to gel. Sick time goes down. Communications go up. A project will not often be undertaken purely out of concern for employee morale but a feature, a methodology, a technology or a technique might be chosen for just this reason. A project might be written in Java instead of C++ just to keep a team more interested in their work, for example.

Now we can attempt to measure employee morale in several ways but we have two main arguments preventing us from doing any meaningful measurement. The first is that there is no good means of measuring an increase in morale based on project decisions. Finding single points of morale boost or morale decrease may be possible but determining overall morale deltas caused by a specific project separate from the overall organization culture is simply unreasonable. The second argument, against being able to measure the OV, is that even once morale change is estimated it is then not possible to determine the degree of effect that this will have against the short term or long term organizational bottom line. And, of course, we must consider the morale bolstering affect of an organization being willing to sponsor projects for the purpose of or, at least, with consideration towards employee happiness.

But this is not to say that employee morale has no value. Certainly it does. I believe that it is an important factor in organizational health. A very important factor indeed.

Any project looking to determine its own value cannot truly do so without considering the implications of non-measurable organizational value. But to what extent should these factors be considered? To this, I believe, there is no simply answer. In an extremely large enterprise where many years of metrics could be collected and careful research into marketing, market pressures, competition, morale, productive velocity and more can be collected and calculated, over a very large system of hundreds of thousands of employees, I believe that we should be able to see reasonably consistent trends that will lend themselves to reducing NMOV factors into estimable organizational value. However even in this circumstance these calculations will have to be done at a very high level of abstraction with a significant amount of organizational research ongoing at all times. And results, unlike OV from specific projects, are most likely to only have a good degree of confidence when undertaken as organizational directives and initiatives and not on a project by project basis.

Large enterprise organizations, those with tens or hundreds of thousands of employees, are often caught by their own bulk and momentum and find that many NMOV factors do not exist for them in the same manner than they exist for small companies. At the one extreme a behemoth manufacturing company with a half million employees will find enacting organization wide morale or velocity initiatives to be difficult to implement, difficult to measure and that the effects are minimal as the momentum of the firm keeps these changes from trickling down to the majority of the workforce without being watered down by the established corporate hierarchy until even the attempt at change is seen as a waste of effort. Large enterprises often settle into a relatively stable state of morale with only truly significant events having a serious or long lasting effect.

Small companies, especially those under five hundred employees, can find a much higher value in NMOV, in my opinion. Small companies gain some of their greatest advantages through the leverage of NMOV. In a tiny company of twenty people one great project could invigorate the entire company for potentially years. Culture and attitudes can change almost instantly and truly great velocities can be achieved and maintained. Smaller companies need to be more attuned to the NMOV factor than their large counterparts. It can be both an advantage and a disadvantage. Small companies do not have the luxury of the employee scale buffer (read: organizational momentum) to keep morale busting events from dragging a company down quickly.

Some larger companies have become famous for managing to keep morale and culture at the forefront of their priority list with exceptional results. Notably Microsoft and Google have become poster-children for great corporate culture even in large firms. And both have become well known for consistently delivering strong technical products, moving the market forward, breaking new ground and keeping employees very happy. Both are also known for investing heavily in research and development which are often incorrectly thought to be NMOV activities but, over time, R&D activities have a reasonable level of estimable value.

NMOV cannot be the sole driver of organizational projects but it should not be discounted. NMOV should be considered even if, at the very least, only from the aspect of attempting to mitigate negative NMOV behaviour or project choices. To some extent, though, I believe that NMOV should be estimated through soft calculations and guesstimation to be accounted for within organizational project portfolio planning as well as corporate culture fostering activities.

Perhaps NMOV, given the potential value that it can add to an organization, should be considered not to be non-measurable but to be immeasurable.

Feature and Specification Marketing

Feature Marketing: Using features as a component of a marketing solution.

Specification Marketing: Using specifications as a component of a marketing solution.

Feature Marketing is traditionally seen in large lists of features of a product.  This can be done in an attempt to overwhelm a consumer with so many facts and figures that they simply assume that a product has whatever features they are looking for or to make them believe that one product is superior to another simply through a volume of features.

Feature Marketing can also be done more legitimately through the building-in of critical features for which consumers are actually searching.  A good example of this is the pivot table feature in Microsoft Excel and many competing spreadsheet applications.  Pivot tables are a key feature that many consumers want or need and will search for specifically when choosing a spreadsheet.

Feature Marketing could generally be used synonymously with “specification marketing” however the two should be recognized as being somewhat distinct.  A specification is an inherent property of a product while a feature is a non-inherent property.  For example, cupholders in cars are features.  A car can quite legitimately be manufactured without cupholders.  Cupholders are marketing features.

A good example of Specification Marketing is modern monitors and televisions providing native 1080p resolution.  This is a specification for which a large percentage of consumers are actively searching and a product of this type that neglects to include this specification is potentially crippling itself in the market or, at the very least, in the educated consumer market.  Resolution is a specification of a monitor or television and not a feature since no monitor can be made without a resolution.

References:

The Death of Feature and Function Marketing