Cutter’s Technical Debt Assessment and Valuation Service
Source: Cutter Technical Debt and Valuation Service
The Cutter Consortium has announced the availability of the Technical Debt Assessment and Valuation Service. The service combines static code analytics with dynamic program analytics to give the client “x-rays” of the software being examined at any desired granularity – from the whole project portfolio to a single instruction. It breaks down technical debt into the areas of coverage, complexity, duplication, violations and comments. Clients get an aggregate dollar figure for “paying back” debt that they can then plug into their financial models to objectively analyze their critical software assets. Based on these metrics, they can make the best decisions about their ongoing strategy for the software development effort under scrutiny.
This new service is an important addition to the enlightened software governance framework that Jim Highsmith, Michael Mah and I have been thinking about and contributing to for sometime now (see Beyond Scope, Schedule and Cost: Measuring Agile Performance and Quantifying the Start Afresh Option). The heart of both the technical debt service and the enlightened governance framework is captured by the following words from the press release:
Executives in charge of software governance have long dealt with two kinds of dollar figures: One, the cost of producing and maintaining the software; and two, the value of the software, which is usually expressed in terms of the net present value associated with the expected value stream the product will generate. Now we can deal with technical debt in the same quantitative manner, regardless of the software methods a company uses.
When expressed in terms of dollars, technical debt ties neatly into value vis-à-vis cost considerations. For a “well behaved” software project, three factors — value, cost, and technical debt — have to satisfy the equation Value >> Cost > Technical Debt. Monitoring the balance between value, cost, and technical debt on an ongoing basis is an effective way for organizations to stay on top of their real progress, and for stakeholders and investors to ensure their investment is sound.
By boiling down technical debt to dollars and tying it to cost and value, the service enables a metrics-driven governance framework for the use of five major constituencies, as follows:
Technical debt assessments and valuation can specifically help CIOs ensure alignment of software development with IT Operations; give CTOs early warning signs of impending project trouble; assure those involved in due diligence for M&A activity that the code being acquired will adapt to meet future needs; enables CEOs to effectively govern the software development process; and, it provides critical information as to whether software under consideration constitutes an asset or a liability for venture capitalists who need to make informed investment decisions.
It should finally be pointed out that the technical debt assessment service and the governance framework it enables are applicable to any software method. They can be used to:
- Govern a heterogeneous environment in which multiple software methods are used
- Make apples-to-apples comparisons between disparate software projects
- Assess project performance vis-a-vis industry norms
Forthcoming Cutter Executive Reports, Executive Updates and Email Advisors on the technical debt service are restricted to Cutter clients. As appropriate, I will publish the latest and greatest news on the subject in the Cutter Blog (which is an open forum I highly recommend).
Acknowledgements: I would like to wholeheartedly thank the following colleagues for inspiring, enlightening and supporting me during the preparation of the service:
- Karen Coburn
- Jennifer Flaxman
- Jonathon Golden
- John Heintz
- Jim Highsmith
- Ken Collier
- Kim Leonard
- Kara Letourneau
- Michal Mah
- Anne Mullaney
- Chris Sterling
- Cindy Swain
- Sarah Wiesbrock
Written by israelgat
May 5, 2010 at 4:40 am
Posted in Agile Performance Management, Companies, Events, Performance Measurement, Software Costs
Tagged with Anne Mullaney, CEO, Chris Sterling, Cindy Swain, CIO, Comments, Complexity, Coverage, CTO, Cutter Consortium, Duplication, Governance Framework, Industry Norms, Israel Gat, IT Operations, Jennifer Flaxman, Jim Highsmith, John Heintz, Jonathon Golden, Kara Letourneau, Karen Coburn, Ken Collier, Kim Leonard, M&A, Michael Mah, NPV, Paying Back, Software Method, Technical Debt, Valuation, Venture Capitalist, Violation
3 Responses
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Thanks for acknowledging all of us at Cutter Consortium! We’re really excited about this Technical Debt Assessment and Valuation service. Israel’s done some of these assessments already and clients have been thrilled at how useful the data they’ve gleaned has been for making decisions about how much to invest in the projects analyzed. We’ll have some case studies available soon.
Anne Mullaney
May 6, 2010 at 9:22 am
So well deserved…
Best,
Israel
israelgat
May 6, 2010 at 10:53 am
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