lazybrick.com lazybrick.com
   Home Page -> About Us -> Privacy Policy -> Terms of Service -> Place Your Link -> Add Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Travel & Accommodation

Careers & Employment

Property & Estate

Business & Companies

Music & Entertainment

Art & Culture

Self Healing

Society & Communities

Sports & Adventure

Games & Play

Healthcare & Treatment

Fitness & Health

Computers & Software

Finance & Investment

Home Family & Garden

Technology & Science

Education & Reference

Relationship & Lifestyle

Children & Teens

Law & Politics

News & Events

Automobiles

Drink & Food

Malls & Shopping

 

Home Page › Computers & Software › Software Resources
 

Productivity and the Big Project Myth

 

Job advertisements in newspapers and on the internet asking for IT professionals usually tout large projects as the sole reason for wanting an IT professional in the first place. A programmer, system analyst or system tester must have had experience in large corporate projects and the larger the better.

Many businesses, in Australia at least, see IT departments as a liability and a necessary evil so as little money as necessary is thrown into IT infrastructure where other areas of a business, for example the Engineering Department or the Buyers Department, get inundated with large budgets. IT Departments have to justify their existence with staff time-sheets and charging internal clients for IT solutions.

Although grandiose back-slapping projects bring in the money and look good on a resume these projects do not necessarily improve the expediency with which a company does business. In fact large corporate systems can increase the workload where more data is required to be captured by the users, call centre staff and so on.

Throughout my consultancy career my main philosophy has been to improve the users or developers work environment by making their job easier. As well as large projects I have developed many small applications that took anywhere between 15 minutes to an hour to create but have saved employees anywhere between hours to months of hard tedious work. The accumulation of small time-saving applications can out-perform some of the larger projects when measuring productivity especially when used over and again exponentially increasing productivity within a company.

Those employees who benefit from many of these small applications are usually confined to the IT department itself where users have direct access to an IT professional who can put together a small custom application during their spare time. Those outside of the IT department though are usually left to their own devices and this is where end users and macro recordable office suites or keyboard capturing software comes into play.

What begins as simple macro instructions within an application built by an end user eventually become large complex and business critical applications held together with chewing gum and string. As news of the application spreads throughout the department more demands are made upon the hapless user who provided the solution and ergo their stress is increased as they maintain the original solution with all its additions whilst trying to cater for a stream of new requests. When a system grows to the point of being unmanageable the department can then justify the expense of a business case which the IT department will then accept, all too often though the business case specifies an upgrade of the original system, a band-aid solution as the ultimate solution, where a total rewrite is really the only solution.

There would be more control over such a situation if IT departments provided small applications for individuals and groups, and companies realised the benefits of incorporating the IT department more into its overall infrastructure instead of annexing it to the companies structure as if it were a parasitic necessity.

Author: Duane Hennessy
 
Author Bio:

Duane Hennessy

In 2004 I started my own company Bandicoot Software to provide high-quality useful software for program development and personal applications.

My day job I am a Senior Systems Adimistrator specialising in MS Office integrated solutions, System Architect and VBScripts providing imaginative solutions to complex business problems.

OTHER FACTS ABOUT ME

- Creator and Moderator of ?AccessDevelopers? web group, an international forum for Access Developers around the world to seek solutions to problems, swap ideas and demonstrative code and discuss theory and practices of Access Database Development.

- Director of my own company Bandicoot Software, Australia.

- I am an author for ezinearticles. I am currently working with some friends in Mexico and Argentina to convert my articles to espa?olas mejecanos and espa?olas argentinas.

- Currently learning Spanish to create software in Spanish. I plan to learn Spanish, Italian, Portuguese and French in this order over the next five years.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Ergonomic Computer Accessories
 
Why You MUST Run an Affiliate Program
 
Article and Blog Writers: Beware the Internet Meanie
 
Domain Name Insanity - Does Your Name Really Matter?
 
Prevent Home Page Link Value Leakage
 
How to Install Your Computer Speakers
 
Shopping Online - Protect Yourself
 
Latest mobile phones to take mobile experience to new heights
 
All About Your Computer's BIOS
 
Better Web Site ROI: Optimized Keyword Marketing and PPC Bid Management
 
 
 
 
 

15 Top Blog Marketing Tips

15 top marketing tips for your online business or personal blog. - Chris Taylor
 

Turn Your Web Site Biography into a Business Building Bonanza

If you own a professional services firm, a Web biography may be the single most powerful new busines ... - Nancy Juetten
 

ERP Software

Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) is the system that handles the internal processes of your busines ... - Jennifer Bailey
 
 

Your Computer Can't Keep Time

A computer needs a certain amount of information to operate; for example, the date and time, the amo ... - Stephen Bucaro
 

Three Solo Ads Secrets That REALLY Work

Solo ads are still one of the most powerful ways to advertise your site, product, special report, bl ... - Tim Bossie
 
 
Home Page -> Privacy Policy -> Terms of Service
Copyright © 2008 www.lazybrick.com