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The Guildmaster’s Handbook: Scope Creep and Other Predators
Beware the quest that quietly grows teeth while nobody is paying attention. The Monster Nobody Notices Throughout my career in software development, I have learned that some of the most dangerous project threats are not technical in nature. Bugs can be identified, analyzed, and fixed. Performance bottlenecks can be measured and optimized. Infrastructure failures can usually be diagnosed through careful investigation and experience. Scope creep is different because it rarely presents itself as a problem at the beginning. Instead, it often arrives disguised as a helpful suggestion, a reasonable enhancement, or an opportunity to improve the final product. Left unmanaged, those small additions accumulate until the original project becomes something…
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The Guildmaster’s Handbook: Working With Stakeholders Without Losing Sanity
The kingdom rarely speaks in technical terms. Wisdom begins with learning how to translate chaos. The Most Important Room Most Engineers Underestimate When many people first enter the world of software development, they imagine that success will be determined primarily by technical skill. They expect to spend their days solving complex problems, learning new technologies, designing elegant systems, and building useful applications. Those activities certainly form an important part of the profession, but they are not the whole story. Over time, most engineers discover that some of the most challenging and valuable work they perform happens away from the keyboard. I learned this lesson slowly. Early in my career, I…





