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Re: Estimation of the number of pages to be written per day?
Subject:Re: Estimation of the number of pages to be written per day? From:sburnf -at- au1 -dot- ibm -dot- com To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com> Date:Wed, 22 Dec 2004 23:00:35 -0700
Thus Spake Geoff Hart:
<<2. Can u please let me know if there are any standards, methods,
<< links that provides u such standard measurements or estimations
<< to plan work for your team?>>
>
> There are no useful standards, because any such standard represents
> a wide range of writing skills, subject matters, and difficulty
> levels. The more your situation differs from the situation used to
> generate the standard, the less relationship the standard bears to
> the productivity you can expect in your situation.
I've found it to be a very useful planning aid. It avoids the problem
of the 'standard situation', because it's based on your own past
performance, not someone else's. (Of course you still have to track
your projects for a while to get realistic benchmarks.)
Even better, the calculator forces you to think about the special
characteristics or risk factors of this project, and how they might
affect your general metrics either way. These dependencies include:
- Product stability/completeness
- Information availability
- Subject-matter expert availability
- Writers' writing and design experience
- Writers' technical experience
... and some others. Clearly, if the project team is very experienced
in the subject matter, audience, and publishing tools, and the product
is functionally stable and a prototype is available to the project team,
you would expect higher productivity. If you have inexperienced writers,
new documentation tools, invisible subject-matter experts, and a product
that is being redeveloped frantically up till the release date, you must
expect to increase your standard estimates for each of these factors.
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