Business Value of Software

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A01=Michael D. S. Harris
Agile Software Development Methodologies
Agile Team
Author_Michael D. S. Harris
Burndown Chart
Business Case
Business Process
Category=KJM
Category=UB
Category=UM
CIO
Cot Software
Cycle Time
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_computing
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eq_isMigrated=2
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FAA
Federal Aviation Administration
Function Points
Information Radiators
Kanban Board
Michael D.S. Harris
Minimum Viable Product
Open Source Software
Portfolio Level
Portfolio Management Team
ROI
Scaled Agile Framework
Scrum Teams
Software Asset
Software Development Process
Software Development Teams
Sprint Backlog
Sprint Planning Meeting
strategic alignment
strategic planning
Technical Debt
WIP Limit

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032476704
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jan 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In business, driving value is a key strategy and typically starts at the top of an organization. In today’s digital age, driving software value is also an important, and often overlooked, key strategy. Executives, and the corporate board, need to expect the highest level of business value from the software the organization is developing, buying, and selling. In today’s digital transformation marketplace, it is imperative that organizations start driving business value from software development initiatives.

For many years, the cost of software development challenged organizations with questions such as:



  • How do we allocate software development costs?


  • Should these costs be considered an overhead expense?


  • Are we getting the most value possible for our investment?


A fundamental problem has been built into these questions – the focus on cost. In almost every other part of the organization, maximizing profit or, in the case of a not-for-profit, maximizing the funds available, provides a clear focus with metrics to determine success or failure. In theory, simply aligning software spending with the maximizing profit goals should be sufficient to avoid any questions about value for money. Unfortunately, this alignment hasn’t turned out to be so simple, and the questions persist, particularly at the strategic or application portfolio level.

In this book, Michael D.S. Harris describes how a software business value culture—one where all stakeholders, including technology and business—have a clear understanding of the goals and expected business value from software development. The book shows readers how they can transform software development from a cost or profit center to a business value center. Only a culture of software as a value center enables an organization to constantly maximize business value flow through software development. If your organization is starting to ask how it can change software from a cost-center to a value-center, this book is for you.

Michael D. S. Harris is a recognized author and speaker on a range of topics related to the Value Visualization of IT. He is considered a thought leader in the software development industry and has more than 30 years of broad management experience in the IT field, including periods in R&D, development, production, business, and academia. Mr. Harris has held numerous senior executive positions in Fortune 500 companies, including: Fidelity National Services (NYSE: FIS), Sanchez Computer Associates (NASDAQ: SCAI) and MasterCard International (NASDAQ: MA). Currently, Mr. Harris is president, CEO and majority owner of David Consulting Group.

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