77 points

Teach this to your manager: At the beginning of a task, uncertainty is highest. Under no circumstances should you give an estimate in ‘man-hours’. Even days is too precise. The first estimate should be in months or years (of course depending on the size of the project). Then, as your insight into the project grows, you refine that to months, then weeks, later days. A vague estimate with a lower and a higher bound is way more useful to your manager than a ridiculously ‘precise’ but highly speculative number.

This lesson was brought to you by either “Code Complete 2” or “Rapid Development” by Steve McConnel, and by my former manager who wanted projects estimated in minutes.

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26 points

my former manager who wanted projects estimated in minutes.

Sorry, the number buffer overflowed.

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14 points

Not if your manager then takes the minimum of your estimate.

I don’t work for a while anymore.

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5 points
*
Removed by mod
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13 points
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I usually say what unit of measurement we’re counting in: days, weeks or months. For more detail, more specs are needed.

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3 points

The project will be completed by Stardate -287289.4717465754

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12 points

Sir, I estimate the project will be completed in 135 days and 11 hours.

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7 points

Just use unix milliseconds

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2 points

Point the ticket using the value of a cryptocurrency.

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57 points

Don’t forget to add padding, so I’d just round it out to 18 months to be safe.

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41 points
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A good project manager doubles your number an adds 20% anyway.

Triples it if you are working more than one project.!

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40 points

A good project manager

A what now?

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38 points

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9 points

HA

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15 points

A typical project manager will get a range, take the lower bound and communicate it as the only relevant number to every other stakeholder. When that inevitably does not work out, all the blame will be passed on to you unfiltered.

Depending on where you work it may or may not be worth giving someone new the benefit of the doubt, but in general it is safer to only ever talk about the upper bound and add some padding.

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6 points

I hear this criticism all the time, but I’ve never seen it happen in 5 companies I’ve worked for so far. Usually there’s an understanding that estimates are wild guessing, and things are planned using dependencies rather than timeliness.

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3 points

Only novice PMs do that and believe it or not, the project manager carries the can for failure .

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2 points

I have a friend who’s a new PM (in scaled agile). He isn’t up on expectation management.

We have a process where we request data from another agency which takes “from 7 seconds to 12 days”

And of course he tells people that. And of course they hear “7 seconds”

I have told him that if the SLA is 12 days, say “less than 12 days”

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12 points
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My teams new hire project manager was even more advanced. When they found out we were working on 5-10 projects at once with no PM, they quit.

We had 3 PMs when I started here, and have been down to 0-1 for 6 months. That 0-1 runs a whole unrelated team, but is technical still a PM.

Dysfunction is fun. The plus side? No one asks me for estimates.

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2 points

Wow. I just lost mine. Been through at least 5 so far… Of course I’m working on around 6 projects at any point.

My favourite was when I migrated a website to Plesk, and my boss wondered why it took me 8 hours to migrate a single website…

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37 points

this is my number one thing I hate. So we are going to be converting over one system to another and you have no ideas what issues will pop up. give an estimation on the project. or like estimation onf fixing a bug or doing something you think the software can do but your not real sure till you look into it.

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11 points

Hofstadter’s Law: It always takes longer than you think, even when you take into account Hofstadter’s Law.

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6 points

The known unknowns and especially the unknown unknowns never get factored into an estimate. People only ever think about the happy path, if everything goes right. But that rarely every happens so estimates are always widely off.

The book How Big Things Get Done describes a much better way to factor in everything without knowing all the unknowns though - Just look a previous similar projects and look how long they took, take the average and bounds then adjust up or down if you have good reason to do so. Your project will very likely take a similar amount of time if your samples are similar in nature to your current task. And the actual time already factors in all the issues and problems encountered and even if you don’t hit all the same issues your problems will likely take a similar amount of time. And the more previous examples you have the better these estimates get.

But instead of that we just pluck numbers out of the air and wonder why we never hit them.

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2 points

yeah I have literally had something where I list off a bunch of problmatic stuff and how it could be some high side and then follow up or everything could go swimmingly which never happens and we could have this low side and they are like ok so the low side. no. no. that is not what im saying.

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25 points

It makes me happy to see the good place memes.

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