

Cut Your Development Cycle by As Much As 50 percent
Ditch that long, tedious development process. See how you can have a quicker and more efficient process and cut those cycles by half.
A challenged project manager thinks about two things that seem to be the order of his everyday life: how quick and how cheap. How quick can he turn over the project to the client? How cheap can he pull it off? Wouldn’t he be the happiest PM if he can achieve both?
Or, is this achievable at all?
Let’s begin by looking again at the stages of the development process: requirements, design, execution, testing/debugging, release. For years, it had been long and tedious work—the process goes in one direction and each stage is completed before proceeding…
To continue reading this
archived content, please sign-in below.




Sign in Now!
Not yet an
member?
Subscribe now. Its free and easy!
- Get the latest news and updates
- Share your favorite articles
- Unlimited access to archives


Exclusive Invitation from
Do you like this article? Sign up to receive more articles each month on similar topics. It's Easy and Free!
Join Us Now.

Get in the Driver’s Seat with Microsoft Project
Transform disorganized projects into effectively managed and understood programs using the gold standard in project management software. Discover why industry leaders claim they are lost without this valuable organizational tool!
Read full storyCMMI - Does Your Supplier Make the Grade?
Looking for a sure-fire way to find a highly-qualified outsourcing partner? Learn how CMMI ratings can help you pinpoint the best candidate for the job!
Read full story- 9 Steps to a Hassle Free and Effective Software Development Project
- Evaluating CMMI: When is it a Good Fit?
- Bringing Agility to Your Software Maintenance Plan: 3 Fool-Proof Tactics
- Software Process Improvement Essentials: The Right Mix
- Project Uncertainty? Insider Reveals Three Secrets for Success
- Is Software Development Risk Costing You Money?
- Exploiting Feedback to Improve Bottom-Line Performance
- SCM: Keeping Your Teams in Sync


