« Camping Out | Main | Tour de France 2004: Live Strong »

July 22, 2004

Get Off The Critical Path

From the words of wisdom department:

When I worked for the Boston based web development team of a major financial services firm, Jim was my manager. Jim would admonish his team to “get off the critical path.”

There’s an animated cartoon where a character is riding on a toy train and laying track as fast as possible in front of the moving engine. Software development can sometimes feel like laying railroad track from the front of a moving train — while also building the train.

Any large project with many contributors will have choke points where tasks that fail to be completed on schedule will slow or stall the work of others. No one wants to be the target of finger pointing when a project schedule slips but “get off the critical path” was not intended as a cynical CYA tactic.

Jim’s approach was not selfish, but holistic. “Get off the critical path” is about planning and communicating, anticipating needs and setting expectations, and being open about setbacks and flexible about alternatives. It’s about having all the members of a team providing good customer service to each other and to all the other teams on a project.


More from the words of wisdom department:
constructive nonconformist: Know What You Know And Know What You Don’t Know

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/18301/908790

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Get Off The Critical Path:

Comments

The comments to this entry are closed.

constructive nonconformist

Useful Books

*

  • Basecamp
    Basecamp project management and collaboration
  • Backpack
    Backpack: Get Organized and Collaborate
  • Technorati

Creative Commons

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 02/2004