-
-
-
-
URL copied!
While any software development initiative has unique features, some situations recur so often that I feel like I should have a recording that I can play back the next time that same situation comes up. One of these is the “What,” “How,” and “When” of software development.
Projects get into trouble when it’s not clear who owns these critical decisions, and—perhaps more importantly—when the wrong person or function tries to own one or more of them. When the business people try to own the technical “how” of a project, you know you’re headed for trouble.
Similarly, when the technical people start designing end-user features (the “what”) without input from the users or the business, that often ends in disaster as well. And when either function tries to dictate “when” without regard to “what” or “how,” that spells trouble big-time.
Just the other day, I heard a business person say, “It’s obvious what they need to do—why can’t they just start coding?” Here the business person was saying, essentially, that the “what” is known (at least in their own mind), so the “how” should be obvious—meaning that engineering should just start doing it.
In such situations, unless the engineers are truly incompetent (rare), it’s very doubtful that the business person speaking actually understands either the “what” or the “how.” The engineers certainly do not, or they would indeed be coding.
Recommended reading: Software, the Last Handmade Thing
When a business person makes a statement like this, if he or she is in a position of sufficient power that the engineers do indeed “just start coding” even in the absence of clarity around the what or the how, the project rarely ends well. In particular, it rarely, if ever, delivers what the business person had in mind, when and how they wanted it.
And—you guessed it—it’s the engineers who generally get blamed for the failure, not the person who insisted they go ahead no matter what.
Projects work best when the business says “what,” the engineers say “how,” and the business and technical people negotiate jointly in good faith over “when.” Sometimes the “when” is fixed—for example, a trade show-driven launch date or an investor deadline. In that case, the business and technical people need to negotiate over the “what” and “how.”
Similarly, either the “how” or the “what” might be fixed—for example, because you are making modifications to an existing system and have limited technical options, or you have committed to deliver a certain feature. In this case, the “when” and the other of the three independent variables (either “what” or “how” respectively) need to be negotiable. Otherwise, a predictable failure—and/or development burnout—will occur.
Perhaps the most frequent issue is when a single person or function tries to own all three—the what, the how, and the when—telling engineering what they need to develop, how they are going to develop it, and when the project is to be delivered. Unless the person doing so is a universal genius—rare—this inevitably leads to problems.
I worked with Steve Jobs for four years at NeXT, and even he rarely tried to dictate all three. Two out of three he would try for—but rarely, if ever, all three (and then not for long). Steve would generally defer to engineering on the “how” and would often (though sometimes grudgingly) accommodate strong pushback on the “when.” While I’ve never worked with Elon Musk, I get the sense he also listens to a core team of engineers he trusts. Unless you consider yourself smarter than Steve Jobs and Mr. Musk, you should pause to reconsider your own actions when you try to dictate what, how, and when to your engineering team.
Another often-overlooked facet of this puzzle is the fact that all three activities require communication. Even if the “what” seems clear in your own mind, it still needs to be expressed in terms that the engineering team can understand. This process of ‘backlog elaboration’ nearly always reveals gaps in the clarity of the initial vision, even if it might have seemed ‘obvious’ to you. Similarly, the ‘how’ may be clear to your technical leads, but it still needs to be expressed in architecture diagrams, sequence diagrams, API specs, and other artifacts that communicate the technical vision to the engineering team.
Only when the “what” and “how” are expressed in sufficient detail can a reliable “when” be produced. The fact that the “what” is clear in our business person’s mind, or the “how” is clear in the mind of the architect, does not mean that the person’s vision could be successfully operationalized without further work. This is why “just start coding” reveals a real gap in understanding of how successful software projects are implemented.
All this can be really fast—even verbally and at the whiteboard in some cases. But in general, the more input and understanding you get from the people actually doing the work, the better your backlog and the more accurate your timeline will be.
A proper appreciation for the value of each ingredient (“what,” “how,” and “when”), combined with due respect for the roles of their proper owners, is the key recipe for successful software development.
More helpful resources:
Top Insights
Innovators and Laggards: The Technology Landscape of 2019
Digital TransformationPerspectiveAutomotiveCommunicationsConsumer and RetailFinancial ServicesHealthcareManufacturing and IndustrialMediaTechnologyTop Authors
Blog Categories
Let’s Work Together
Related Content
Accelerating Digital Transformation with Structured AI Outputs
Enterprises increasingly rely on large language models (LLMs) to derive insights, automate processes, and improve decision-making. However, there are two significant challenges to the use of LLMs: transforming structured and semi-structured data into suitable formats for LLM prompts and converting LLM outputs back into forms that integrate with enterprise systems. OpenAI's recent introduction of structured … Continue reading What, How, and When in Software Development →
Learn more
Accelerating Enterprise Value with AI
As many organizations are continuing to navigate the chasm between AI/GenAI pilots and enterprise deployment, Hitachi is already making significant strides. In this article, GlobaLogic discusses the importance of grounding any AI/GenAI initiative in three core principles: 1) thoughtful consideration of enterprise objectives and desired outcomes; 2) the selection and/or development of AI systems that are purpose-built for an organization’s industry, its existing technology, and its data; and 3) an intrinsic commitment to responsible AI. The article will explain how Hitachi is addressing those principles with the Hitachi GenAI Platform-of-Platforms. GlobalLogic has architected this enterprise-grade solution to enable responsible, reliable, and reusable AI that unlocks a high level of operational and technical agility. It's a modular solution that GlobalLogic can use to rapidly build solutions for enterprises across industries as they use AI/GenAI to pursue new revenue streams, greater operational efficiency, and higher workforce productivity.
Learn more
Unlock the Power of the Intelligent Healthcare Ecosystem
Welcome to the future of healthcare The healthcare industry is on the cusp of a revolutionary transformation. As we move beyond digital connectivity and data integration, the next decade will be defined by the emergence of the Intelligent Healthcare Ecosystem. This is more than a technological shift—it's a fundamental change in how we deliver, experience, … Continue reading What, How, and When in Software Development →
Learn more
Crowd-Striked: Lessons Learned and Best Practices for Future Prevention
Incident Summary On July 19, 2024, CrowdStrike released a content configuration update for the Windows sensor that resulted in widespread system instability, causing Windows systems to experience the "Blue Screen of Death" (BSOD). The issue was traced to a channel file named “C-00000291*.sys” included in the update, which caused system crashes upon deployment. “Channel files” … Continue reading What, How, and When in Software Development →
Learn more
Share this page:
-
-
-
-
URL copied!