SAME STATS, DIFFERENT IMPROVEMENTS
After 12 months of managing #bugs, #developers A, B, and C changed their approach.
Assuming a steady flow of bugs of the same kind, whose change is an improvement❓
Boosts appreciated! 🙂 :boost_love:
More generally, the problem is domain independent.
#OpenSource #FreeSoftware #FOSS #FLOSS #Software #Tech #Development #Engineering #Business #Improvement #Software #Programming #Python #InfoSec #Statistics #Linux
A changed nothing, and I worry they’re managing to the metric.
B stopped opening and closing a large number of trivial bugs.
C did a cull of old bugs and changed their intake behavior but is growing a backlog.
A has been consistently improving it since before the change, so it’s only possible that they are managing to the metric if they had earlier access to it.
B may be doing that, but the graph doesn’t actually measure how many bugs you closed. Those ones seem to have decided to manage by the metric, removing the variance but targeting a high, comfortable level.
Agreed on C, they did a large “hey, we will be measured by that now” one time effort and then forgot about the metric.
The change didn’t improve anybody’s performance.