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Outside-in Software Development: A Practical Approach to Building Successful Stakeholder-based Products, 1/e (Paperback)

~ (Author), John Sweitzer (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

"Outside-in thinking complements any approach your teams may be taking to the actual implementation of software, but it changes how you measure success. A successful outside-in team does a lot of learning and not much speculation."

—Tom Poppendieck

Build Software That Delivers Maximum Business Value to Every Key Stakeholder

Imagine your ideal development project. It will deliver exactly what your clients need. It will achieve broad, rapid, enthusiastic adoption. And it will be designed and built by a productive, high-morale team of expert software professionals. Using this book's breakthrough "outside-in" approach to software development, your next project can be that ideal project.

In Outside-in Software Development, two of IBM's most respected software leaders, Carl Kessler and John Sweitzer, show you how to identify the stakeholders who'll determine your project's real value, shape every decision around their real needs, and deliver software that achieves broad, rapid, enthusiastic adoption.

The authors present an end-to-end framework and practical implementation techniques any development team can quickly benefit from, regardless of project type or scope. Using their proven approach, you can improve the effectiveness of every client conversation, define priorities with greater visibility and clarity, and make sure all your code delivers maximum business value.

Coverage includes

  • Understanding your stakeholders and the organizational and business context they operate in
  • Clarifying the short- and long-term stakeholder goals your project will satisfy
  • More effectively mapping project expectations to outcomes
  • Building more "consumable" software: systems that are easier to deploy, use, and support
  • Continuously enhancing alignment with stakeholder goals
  • Helping stakeholders manage ongoing change long after you've delivered your product
  • Mastering the leadership techniques needed to drive outside-in development


About the Author

Carl Kessler is vice president of worldwide development with the IBM Software Group. He has led large software development organizations at IBM for more than a decade, primarily in the enterprise content management, systems management, security, and networking arenas. Prior to his product development assignments, Carl was with IBM Research where his roles included director of software technology and chief information officer. Carl is a senior member of the IEEE and holds several patents.

John Sweitzer is an IBM Distinguished Engineer and a member of the IBM Academy of Technology with more than twenty-six years of experience developing architectures for large complex software systems. He currently leads the IBM Software Group's outside-in design initiative, a subset of outside-in development that addresses design practices that impact the consumability and business relevance of integrated software products. Previously John was the chief architect for the IBM Autonomic Computing initiative, and prior to that, chief architect for the Tivoli systems management brand. John was a founding member of the DMTF standards committee for the Common Information Model, authored a book about that model, has several external publications, and holds numerous patents.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: IBM Press; 1 edition (October 4, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0131575511
  • ISBN-13: 978-0131575516
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.9 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #483,556 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Carl Kessler
Discover books, learn about writers, read author blogs, and more.

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Average Customer Review
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Two profound notions, October 25, 2007
We who develop software are told often that we should build software that "delights" customers. Trouble is, precisely how one is supposed to do this is too often left to conscientiousness and integrity alone, without clear guidance as to how one might be most effective. In the Agile community, which in many ways represents the future of software engineering, we are told that the "on-site" customer is the way to go. Trouble is, in practice, it's often impossible or at least unrealistic to get a customer to engage at this level of commitment, and worse, they may not represent the community that cares about our software very well. Here at last is a book that gives us a fighting chance to understand how to delight the people who buy our software.

First, Outside-in Software development expresses the simple but profound idea that stakeholders should be thought of as four essential constituencies: as principals (people who buy software), end users, partners (business partners and others), and insiders. These categories force us to think about far more than end users, as important as they are. What if, for example, we are focusing solely on end users, without really considering what it is that the people who buy our software are hoping to accomplish?

Second, too much of the literature in the software engineering field talks about simple teams of ten building new software for emerging markets, software that is shipped to clients installing the software for the first time. The reality is usually significantly more complex. The chapter on organizational context provides a holistic perspective of the groups we sell our software to -- with a far greater reality reflected than we are accustomed to hearing about.

Overall then, Outside-in Software Development is a clear, pragmatic discussion about a tremendously difficult concept: getting from requirements to code in a way that reflects all of the various stakeholders of our software.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Great title. Content doesn't match up. , June 15, 2008
By Don V (Seattle, Wa USA) - See all my reviews
I'm not a developer (though I used to be), and now am on the dark side (marketing/product management). The concepts this book endorse, namely to focus on stakeholders and their needs, is exactly what needs to be done for new products. Unfortunately, I felt as though this book was written for new developers with little real world experience and I found myself looking for something new and useful. It didn't happen. If you really want to understand how to develop products by focusing on stakeholder goals, then try this one: User Stories Applied by Mike Cohen.

It is written for Agile Software development, but the concepts can be applied to any product and focuses you on WHAT GOALS DO USERS REALLY HAVE WHEN USING YOUR PRODUCT. If you understand this concept, you will be most effective at developing products.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A much needed perspective, November 30, 2007
First, by way of full disclosure, I have worked for Carl Kessler in the past. What this means, however, is that I can state that the material contained in this book is not speculative, or just simply "theory," but it embodies the way in which Carl has very effectively run large development organizations in developing enterprise level software that truly delights customers, and how John has been instrumental in those efforts.

The other reviewers of this book have already discussed one of the book's key notions, that of obtaining "stakeholder" perspectives as part of the process of designing software -- and it's an important notion that is explored thoroughly in the book. I can recommend the book just based on this one item alone.

However, there are three other key notions that the book addresses which, I believe, set it apart from other software development books. The first is the whole idea of "Consumability." If you've not heard of Consumability, you really need to learn more about it. It takes the concept of understanding a customer's perspective to a new level.

The second key point is how one defines the "success" of a project. For most in the software industry, it means either having shipped a product on schedule or having made the projected revenues (or, perhaps, both). As important as those "successes" are, what "Outside-in Software Development" encourages is that success also be defined in terms of the "success" of the customers of the product -- are they receiving the value promised by the product? If not, then perhaps the product's other "successes" will be short-lived...

And, finally, the last key idea I'd like to touch on (in order to further encourage you to read this book) is that of understanding your customer's organizational structure when designing products. Carl and John do an excellent job of explaining how this perspective is often overlooked by software designers and developers, but how important it is in ensuring your product really does permit your customers to be successful by using your product in their environment.

Highly recommended!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Outside-in SW development a realistic approach
Having worked in the software development industry for 20+ years, one reoccurring issue centers around who is the real 'customer'. Read more
Published 22 months ago by R. Bowers

5.0 out of 5 stars A top pick for any college-level collection
OUTSIDE-IN SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT: A PRACTICAL APPROACH TO BUILDING SUCCESSFUL STAKEHOLDER-BASED PRODUCTS comes from two respected IBM industry leaders and tells how to build... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Midwest Book Review

4.0 out of 5 stars a solid book
"Outside-in Software Development" is about looking at software from the point of view of the stakeholders. Read more
Published on November 3, 2007 by Jeanne Boyarsky

4.0 out of 5 stars deprecate partner involvement
Befuddled by a myriad of software development methodologies, and the incessant arguing between the proponents of these? Kessler and Sweitzer take a slightly different tack. Read more
Published on October 12, 2007 by W Boudville

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