Archive for the ‘High Maturity Appraisals’ Category

Another SEPG is in the bag…on to San Jose in ‘09

March 22nd 2008

That’s right, SEPG 08 is all done and over! My first time in Tampa and I must say that it is a great little city. If you ever get the chance to visit there, make sure you go to Ybor City. This part of town hosts some great restaurants. This historical section of the city has many wonders to explore. Make sure you visit the cigar factories where you can watch the craftsmen and ladies roll world class cigars from cuban seeded tobacco. No, I’m not a cigar smoker, but these skilled individuals are the last of a great tradition of making cigars by hand, not machine.

The conference ended up with about 1400 attendees. The program had a variety of talks, but I believe the bias this year was toward discussing measurement and high maturity practices. Bob and I did a couple of tutorials that were pretty well attended. On Monday I did a PPQA tutorial that had about 200 attendees. I find it interesting that over the years, people are still interested in a value added approach for implementing QA. It’s a fundamental concept that is not too difficult to understand, but I suspect that folks find it difficult to implement, therefore their interest in the tutorial.

Monday night was an opportunity to meet with the SEI Partner Advisory Board members. We just elected some new members and held our meeting to discuss our role and activities as representatives for the Partner community.

On Tuesday I was on a panel that was moderated by Ron Radice. My fellow panel members included John Maher, and Madhumita Sen. The panel was interesting and focused on the direction that the SEI is taking on a variety of topics to include high maturity, appraisals, and the model. I was happy to see some SEI folks in the audience along with a number of lead appraisers. A strange thing happened during the panel session. The convention center’s automated alarm system notified us in a rather loud fashion that we needed to vacate the building immediately. Man, did the attendees “git up and out” quickly. Within a few minutes of our hasty egress, the automated lady got back on the horn to let us know that it was a false alarm. Strange thoughts were making their way through my head as I thought…nah….there are no terrorists in Tampa. Why would they want to hold a bunch of process geeks hostage?

Tuesday night I had planned on going to the ISD bash. Every year these guys throw a party and invite folks to enjoy the good fun. Joe Morin knows how to put on a good party. Unfortunately I was feeling a bit punky from a cold that I brought from San Jose that finally got the best of me. Wednesday I spent most of the day in my Residence Inn room watching CNN and feeling spent. Eventually I rallied and felt well enough Wednesday night to have a great dinner with Bob at the Acropolis in Ybor City. Boy do they have great Moussaka! Their Spanakopita is delicious too! Seriously, you need to hit this Greek establishment if you are in town. Prices are right, the food is fab, and the elderly gent playing Balalaika is charming. One of their traditions is for the waiters to toss paper napkins in the air while dancing to traditional Greek music. Nice touch.

Bob got the nod to speak on Thursday afternoon, which is the kiss of death at this conference. Many attendees decide to bail out on Thursday, so there aren’t a lot of people left at the conference to fill the room. About 150 showed up however, and Bob said he had a fun time.

I was surprised to find out that San Jose is the location for the 09 conference. San Jose last hosted in 97 and it was a monster smash hit. Hopefully we’ll have the same success in 2009.

Ah well, it’s good to be back in the bay. Actually I was in the bay, Tampa Bay that is. But truth be told, there is nowhere like this bay, the south bay, of San Francisco! I love my home……………..

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Do Process Improvement Models Matter?

February 2nd 2008

Do Models Matter?

As the days creep closer to this year’s SEPG conference, I’m thinking about how much I enjoyed participating in the European SEPG plenary panel, “Staged versus Continuous Models, Is There a Winner”. As a panel participant, my hope was that the panel would inspire the audience to ask questions that they may not have thought about in the past. Questions about the role that software process improvement models play in delivering software more expeditiously, less expensively, and with greater reliability.

Questions such as:

  • Is a staged model’s organizational approch incremental enough to support today’s fast-paced organizations faced with ever increasing competitive pressures?
  • Does a continuous model’s process capability approach offer enough of a roadmap to support organizational improvement?
  • The answers to these two questions depend on many factors, with a primary factor being prevailing culture. For example, does the organization prefer flexibility or more of a spoon feeding approach when it comes to the guidance that is offered in a model? Based on the answers, the choice of either process capablity or organizational maturity representations that the CMMI offers becomes more clear.

    “My model’s better than yours” certainly leads to great discussions.

    Should one pursue ITIL, ISO 9001, Trillium, TQM, Deming, Crosby, Juran, CMM, CMMI staged, CMMI continuous or a combination thereof? What’s a Software Process Improvement guru to do with all these choices?

    Another question one might ask is:

    Do models really matter as much as wanting to change?

    I believe an organization can find goodness in all models if it exploits them in a way that supports its business and cultural needs. I also believe that if an organization doesn’t feel a compelling need for change, it will find fault in all models. Enough fault that it will dismiss all models out of hand as being useless.

    If your organization really wants to improve, you’ll embrace what’s attractive to you in the model and overlook what’s of questionable value.

    So, models do matter, but not nearly as much as wanting to change?

    What do you think?

    See you at the SEPG 2008 conference!

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    Good News…the High Maturity exam is over…

    May 1st 2007

    From: Jeff Welch

    To: Bill Deibler

    Subject: SCAMPI High Maturity Lead Appraiser Exam Results

    Date: Fri, 13 Apr 2007

    Dear Bill,

    It is with great pleasure that we are able to present you with notification from the Software Engineering Institute that you have been awarded the SCAMPI High Maturity Lead Appraiser certification. This certification recognizes your expertise for determining that an organization has demonstrated the capability to quantitatively manage its projects to produce high-quality, predictable results at CMMI Maturity Levels 4 and 5.

    Benefits of this certification include recognition from the SEI as a member of the select group of individuals who are setting the standards for the lead appraiser community. We will be sure to keep you up-to-date regarding SEI SCAMPI HM LA certification developments through email and the SEI SCAMPI HM LA certification web site.

    Congratulations!

    Jeff

    Jefferson Welch - SEI Certification Manager

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