The Wrong Kind of Lean: Over-Commitment and Under-Represented Skills on Technology Teams


Autoria(s): Lucas, William; Shroyer, Edward; Noel, Gerald; Schwartz, Brian
Data(s)

17/01/2005

17/01/2005

17/05/2000

Resumo

This paper reports on results from five companies in the aerospace and automotive industries to show that over-commitment of technical professionals and under-representation of key skills on technology development and transition teams seriously impairs team performance. The research finds that 40 percent of the projects studied were inadequately staffed, resulting in weaker team communications and alignment. Most importantly, the weak staffing on these teams is found to be associated with a doubling of project failure rate to reach full production. Those weakly staffed teams that did successfully insert technology into production systems were also much more likely than other teams to have development delays and late engineering changes. The conclusion suggests that the expense of project failure, delay and late engineering changes in these companies must greatly out-weigh the savings gained from reduced staffing costs, and that this problem is likely going to be found in other technology-intensive firms intent on seeing project budgets as a cost to be minimized rather than an investment to be maximized.

Formato

179700 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/7521

Idioma(s)

en_US

Tipo

Other