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The Relationship between Customer Collaboration and Software Project Overruns
Washington, DC August 13-August 17
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/AGILE.2007.57AGILE 2007 (AGILE 2007)
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Kjetil Molokken-Ostvold, Simula Research Laboratory, P.O.Box 134, 1325 Lysaker, Norway
Kristian Marius Furulund, University of Oslo, P.O.Box 1080 Blindern, 0316 Oslo, Norway
Most agile projects rely heavily on good collaboration with the customer in order to achieve project goals and avoid overruns. However, the role of the customer in software projects is not fully understood. Often, successful projects are attributed to developer competence, while unsuccessful projects are attributed to customer incompetence. A study was conducted on eighteen of the latest projects of a software contractor. Quantitative project data was collected, and project managers interviewed, on several issues related to estimates, key project properties, and project outcome. It was found that in projects where collaboration was facilitated by daily communication between the contractor and the customer, they experienced a lesser magnitude of effort overruns. In addition, employing a contract that facilitates risk-sharing may also have a positive impact.
Citation:
Kjetil Molokken-Ostvold, Kristian Marius Furulund, "The Relationship between Customer Collaboration and Software Project Overruns," agile, pp.72-83, AGILE 2007 (AGILE 2007), 2007
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