ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::ECommerce

Intranet Project – RAD or Waterfall?

Author : David Viney

Building Bridges

I have often used the analogy of building a bridge to explain to business colleagues the difference between Rapid Application Development (RAD) and Waterfall.

Let’s say that we are in the middle ages and the Mayor of Kingston-upon-Thames is evaluating whether or not to build a bridge over the river to the north side, to replace the current ferry. The whole area has been growing rapidly and a bridge at Kingston should give his town a lead against competing local towns like Ham and Richmond (who also have their own ferries).

However, building a bridge presents problems. Firstly, the bedrock north and south of the river are very different. Secondly, the river is still tidal at this point and its path continues to vary across the floodplain. Finally – and perhaps most importantly – there is no guarantee that the projected growth in cross-river traffic will indeed materialise – or that people will wish to cross at this precise point, rather than further up, or down, river. A new bridge could prove an expensive white elephant and divert much-needed town resources away from other projects. The increased local taxes required could also scare the very businesses he is hoping to attract away to other local towns.

Option 1 - Waterfall

Waterfall, as a methodology, is all about building reliable systems. At each stage of the lifecycle, the results are correct. The Mayor’s engineer believes that - when building a bridge - the result needs to be safe, sound and capable of lasting for decades. He recommends a design phase, which includes thoroughly testing the bedrock by driving piles and developing ways to limit the future variance of the river’s course. During the build phase, the bridge would be tested to ensure it can take the loads that will be placed upon it and to deal with high winds or flood conditions. The engineer confirms that each stage would only start once the previous stage had been proved correct beyond reasonable doubt. The stone bridge will take five whole years to build (with a high upfront cost commitment). If the project were ever stopped, the value tied up in phases to date would be lost. The engineer reminds the Mayor that a collapsed bridge would not help his place in history!

Option 2 - RAD

RAD, as a methodology is all about building relevant systems. The argument runs that it is better to be there quickly with 80% of the functionality in 20% of the time, so as to take full advantage of the business opportunity. The Mayor’s political advisors recommend the RAD option; to lay a pontoon bridge first alongside the existing ferry. This can be achieved in just three months, using a series of boats with a makeshift road surface and swing bridge lock for river vessels to navigate. The pontoon bridge allows the business model to be tested very quickly; If the expected benefits materialise, then further iterations of the bridge can be constructed later on. Sounds good, but of course (overall) the costs will be higher than waterfall if a full, stone bridge is ultimately required. In the meantime, if the river changes course, or floods impact the area, then the pontoon bridge will be washed away. His chief advisor reminds him that a bridge five years from now would not help his re-election prospects two years hence!

The Mayor’s selected option

Hmm. Interesting, isn’t it. Not a clear-cut decision. There are good arguments for either approach. The Mayor’s decision will ultimately depend on (a) how sure he is of his own vision, (b) his financial and time constraints and (c) how changeable these factors are likely to be over time. In short, he has a trade-off decision of relevance vs. reliability.

Turning the analogy onto Intranet Projects

In the http://www.viney.com/DFV/intranet_portal_guide/during/development_methodology.html">Development Methodology chapter of my (free to access) Intranet Portal Guide, I explore these concepts in a bit more depth.

However – put simply – the answer for you will depend largely on how sure you are of your vision, the support of stakeholders, the availability of resources and the degree of change in your organisation and it’s requirements.

If you are operating in a stable business environment and are well funded and supported, then waterfall offers real benefits. You could establish an Intranet Portal that is well founded, scalable and secure. If not, then RAD could offer you the means to make some progress now at low cost and use the results of your early work to build a stronger case for future investment. It also allows you to vary the approach – or begin again – should circumstances or requirements change.

Most Intranet evangelists will find themselves perhaps in a mixed situation, where there is support and funding but there is also the risk of rapid changes to the underlying business environment and requirements. Here, I would recommend a mixed approach: Use a waterfall project to establish the underlying portal infrastructure (as this platform will be the bedrock on which you will build and needs to stand the test of time). Then use a RAD method to build the content and applications (developing solutions that are timely and relevant to businesses operating in a fast-moving and competitive environment).

About the author:

David Viney (david@viney.com) is the author of the Intranet Portal Guide; 31 pages of advice, tools and downloads covering the period before, during and after an Intranet Portal implementation.

Read the guide at http://www.viney.com/DFV/intranet_portal_guide or the Intranet Watch Blog at http://www.viney.com/intranet_watch.

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Online Merchant Account - Costs and Alternatives
  2. A Tale of Two Revolutions - Ecommerce: A Historical Perspective
  3. The Truth About Receiving Free Electrical Items
  4. 6 Secrets to Preventing Email Overload
  5. 6 Tips For Affiliates - Choose Your Merchant Wisely
  6. Blogging for Business - Should You?
  7. The Perfect Home Based Business?
  8. Think Like Google with AdSense
  9. How to Create Wealth
  10. eCommerce: Installing and Configuring your Shopping Cart
  11. Focus: The Magic Formula For Success
  12. Virtual Real Estate Investing in 2006 by Jack Humphrey
  13. Do ebooks sell?
  14. Work At Home - You Have To Look Beyond The Glamour
  15. Five Ways to Increase Website Traffic through Online Message Boards and Blogs
  16. News Bytes From The Web
  17. Building Valuable Web Content... Fast
  18. Succeeding with Ebay Auctions
  19. Give Me a One,Two,Three, and a Forum - Online Forum Etiquette
  20. E-Commerce Solutions
  21. Intelligent Toy of the Month Club
  22. Hype. Captivating Copy or Crass Content?
  23. Autosurfs: Making Money Surfing The Net.
  24. Top of the Game: eBay's Bestsellers
  25. Start an eBay Business Now!
More related feeds
Intranet Project - RAD or Waterfall?
Building Bridges I have often used the analogy of building a bridge to explain to business colleagues the difference between Rapid Application Development (RAD) and Waterfall. Lets say that we are in the middle ages and the Mayor of ...

Intranet Project ? RAD or Waterfall?'
RAD or Waterfall?, Ecommerce, Ecommerce articles, Ecommerce information, about Ecommerce, what is Ecommerce, E-commerce Information', 'Intranet Project ? RAD or Waterfall? plus articles and information on Ecommerce.

Intranet Project – Rad Or Waterfall?
Here, I would recommend a mixed approach: Use a waterfall project to establish the underlying portal infrastructure (as this platform will be the bedrock on which you will build and needs to stand the test of time). Then use a RAD ...

Intranet Portal Guide - Intranet Watch: Managing Project Risks and ...
Previous Posts. Stakeholder Analysis and Stakeholder Management · Intranet Portal - Business Case ROI · Intranet Project Names - some ideas · Intranet Portal Project - RAD or Waterfall? ...

Intranet Portal Guide - Intranet Watch: Stakeholder Analysis and ...
Previous Posts. Intranet Portal - Business Case ROI · Intranet Project Names - some ideas · Intranet Portal Project - RAD or Waterfall? Archives. 10/01/2004 - 11/01/2004 · 12/01/2004 - 01/01/2005 · 01/01/2005 - 02/01/2005 ...

Intranet Portal Guide - Intranet Watch: Intranet - The Benefits ...
In the Benefits Realisation section of my free-to-read Intranet Portal Guide, I outline a number of tools that can be used to better manage benefits on the typical portal project. 1) An enhanced Business Case: ...

Intranet Portal Guide - Intranet Watch: Intranet Portals ...
This functionality is often the most heavily used and of particular value for project teams, where many hundreds of key documents may be created in the course of delivery. 4) Allocate Tasks: The team can set-up tasks and allocate them ...

ecommerce: How To Sell Websites Fast !
Intranet Project ? RAD or Waterfall? Building Bridges. A Tale of Two Revolutions - Ecommerce: A Historical Perspective The World As It Then Was. The Rise of Multinational Virtual Corporations The virtual corporation is the emerging ...

Diploma of IT: ICAA4233A Determine and apply appropriate ...
A 3: Waterfall model. Q 4: Which methodology requires a high level of user involvement throughout the project? A 4: Rapid application development (RAD). 2: Apply the selected development methodology. Refering to the previous section, ...

Key methodologies - 14 Oct 2008 - Computing
Waterfall defines a project-based development cycle that flows steadily downwards. There is a strict sequence of development from beginning to end, where each stage of the cycle must be completed before another is started, ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved