Metric drives behavior
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- Metrics without goals are naked—Metrics should always give you a clue on where you are regarding your goals. So, find out where you are, how you measure that, and where you want to be. Set up a metric that tracks your progress.
- Balanced Metrics—Many metrics only focus on operational excellence. This creates a biased view on reality and distorts and deforms the organization as a whole. Therefore, balance metrics across the following dimensions:
- Operational Excellence
- Velocity
- Burn rate
- Predictability
- Sustainability
- Meeting deadlines
- Stay within budget
- Meet quality requirements
- Cohesive set user stories in a sprint
- User Orientation
- Availability
- Performance
- User satisfaction (net promoter score (NPS)
- Business Value
- Business value per € development
- Business value realization
- Future Orientation
- Enthusiasm and motivation
- happiness index
- Educational opportunities
- Vision on future development
- Innovative governance
- Have participants brainstorm on metrics and put each of them in the most appropriate category. Next, pick one or two from each catagory to create balance.
- Consider using planguage to capture metrics in a solid, comprehensive and consistent way.
- Operational Excellence
To process
- Donald Reinertsen's take on good metrics.