Task: Schedule and Assign Work |
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This tasks describes all the things that must be accomplished for an approved Change Request to be incorporated in the development schedule. |
Disciplines: Project Management |
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Purpose
The purpose is to accommodate approved changes (defects, enhancements), to product and process, which arise during an
iteration. |
Relationships
Roles | Primary Performer:
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Inputs | Mandatory:
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Outputs |
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Main Description
The Iteration Plan prepared at the start of the iteration can select only
from what is known at the time. This will be an increment of the total capability required (functional and
non-functional requirements), and Change
Requests left over from previous iterations. The Project Manager can then determine the resources and schedule for
the iteration. Allowance for defects should be built into the plan for the iteration, either implicitly, in the effort
allocated to the production of a work product, or explicitly, in particular activities. It is recommended that the
latter method be adopted and the Rational Unified Process contains tasks to make this possible.
Although the priority for fixes is assigned by the Change Control Manager, Project Manager may still exercise some planning discretion in deciding when fixes should be made - but in
general, an attempt should be made to correct defects in the iteration in which they are discovered, and it should be
possible to do this with the resources planned at the start of the iteration. There will inevitably be some
(discovered) defects left unfixed at the end of an iteration (because an iteration should be timeboxed), but for the
iteration to be deemed a success, it is not likely that many of these would be severe or rated high priority for other
reasons.
Little allowance can be made, however, for other than trivial enhancement requests, that arise unexpectedly. If such a
Change Request for a substantial enhancement is sanctioned for the current iteration, the Project Manager will almost
certainly have to re-plan, either by pushing off some planned capability to the next iteration, or by finding extra
resources to make the change. Usually, such requests for enhancements will be held over for the next iteration, or even
later ones, and then be made part of the regular iteration planning cycle.
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Steps
Allocate Change Request to an Iteration
The Change Request is examined and the Project Manager decides, based on its type, priority and severity, in which
iteration it should be fixed. If the Change Request is to be held until a later iteration, the Project Manager simply
re-plans the future iterations (in the Software Development Plan), so that the impact of the Change Request is
understood now, and resource acquisition tasks can be initiated as early as possible, to avoid unpleasant surprises
later.
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Assign Responsibility
The Project Manager decides which organizational position(s) should be responsible for implementing the change.
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Describe Work and Expected Outputs
The Change Request should already contain a description in outline of the required change (because the Change Request
has already been analyzed and approved). This step refines that description into an unambiguous statement of what is to
be done and produced.
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Budget Effort and other Resources
The Project Manager, in consultation with those responsible for the Change Request, refines the effort and other
resource estimates in the Change Request into firm planning estimates, to which the responsible staff are expected to
commit.
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Set Schedule
If the Change Request is to be implemented in the current iteration, the Project Manager, in consultation with those
assigned responsibility, will set a start date and expected duration for the work.
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Re-plan
If necessary, the current Iteration Plan is revised, and any impact on future iterations should be reflected in the
Software Development Plan. As a result of the re-planning, the Project Manager may have to invoke the Task: Handle Exceptions and Problems, to bring the project state into
line with the new plans, particularly if the current iteration is affected by a resource shortfall or slippage of
planned capability to later iterations.
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Issue Work Order
The Work Order(s) defining the work to be done, schedule, responsibility, and so on, are issued by the Project Manager.
The activity (in the work breakdown structure) against which the effort is budgeted, is identified in the Work
Order.
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More Information
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