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Many things stated by the two authors are kind of obvious, like how expensive the turnover is, that we should include the team in the hiring process and that methodologies are restrictive.
It’s a fantastic opportunity to recapitulate those topics; some were written more than 30 years ago.
Peopleware was the first book that I recall to mention the need for a sociological view, not only a technical one over projects and teams. As such, Tom and Timothy’s theories are still valid.Among the theories, I how they state the importance of peer view (or , in our case), and that knowledge workers, like software engineers, are continuously working their soft and hard skills.The theories go through the traps of , how office influences how we work, the impact of quality in our work, and much more.The content works pretty well for an introductory approach on how to expose your ideas, find allies, and, most importantly, check whether your proposals are plausible.
The book also lists some categories of skepticism, which was very valuable to me. I could better understand how the team responded to my inclinations and how I responded to others. This awareness is an excellent start for those wanting to manage large teams.
I confess the book is not very practical, and that may be a disadvantage against it. However, it was very relevant when I read it for the first time, and I strongly suggest you read this short (~200 pages) book even though it won’t answer all your questions or tell you exactly what to do.The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks was first published in 1975 (almost 50 years ago!) and covers .
The author creates the concept of man-month. It’s the unit for the amount of work of a person in a month. Then, he defends that adding more people to a late project makes it later. It’s known as .It relates to the latest and hottest discussions in the agile world about “coordination costs”: when you increase the number of people in a group, organizing work gets harder. Thus, it requires more meetings and management efforts to align everybody, which delays the software development even more.
It’s an inspiring book, a classic one, which, in a certain way, is still modern and worth the reading.