Schedule and Events



March 26-29, 2012, Software Test Professionals Conference, New Orleans
July, 14-15, 2012 - Test Coach Camp, San Jose, California
July, 16-18, 2012 - Conference for the Association for Software Testing (CAST 2012), San Jose, California
August 2012+ - At Liberty; available. Contact me by email: Matt.Heusser@gmail.com

Friday, June 26, 2009

Corey Haines on Metrics

Corey Haines is more a pure developer-type who does test automation, and he is heavily involved in the "Software Craftsmanship" movement. He's made a bit of a name for himself by travelling around the country, pairing and interviewing other practitioners who are serious about doing a good job in software work, with a development emphaisis.

And he just released a video on metrics ...

Road Thoughts - Visible Metrics from Corey Haines on Vimeo.



Now, these are dev-facing metrics, culled from the codebase and automated tests themselves. You wouldn't have to enter these into a spreadsheet and email them to your boss once a week, nor would your company have to pay a few thousand dollars per person for a tool to do this for you. So it has certain inherent advantages over most test metrics.

That said, I like the general idea: That a practitioner would take a series of measures in order to personally understand and improve in his work.

This is very different from many metrics discussions, where it is assumed that management will consume the metrics for the purposes of evaluation.

The former one has a good chance of working. The latter tends to introduce dysfunction, as the team will find ways to give management lots of whatever they are measured by, and this may or may not correlate to actual improvement.

2 comments:

Laurent said...

Really interesting video.

I like how you both talk about improving yourself as the first purpose of getting metrics on your code.

I think that everybody should gather metrics on his code, even if nobody care about that where you work.

For those interested, I would like to point out the Object-Oriented Software Metrics book. It's a bit old (1994), but still, some interesting metrics are presented in there.

Ina O' Murchu said...

Hi Matt,

Would you have an email address that i could use?

Kind regards,

Ina