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Rating: Summary: dated Review: . . .This was the first book to address CMM. Unfortunately it is dated. The cd-rom contains a little useful material -- if you don't have anything, but is insufficient to do CMM. There are commercially available prewritten processes but they may be difficult to adapt to your organisation. Caputo won't help there either. If you get Paulk and Dymond you don't need this book. You cannot do CMM without Paulk (or TR24 and TR25 which Paulk is mostly a rehash of). Hence you don't need Caputo too. You will need the Framework by Olson (download from SEI) to supplement Paulk. Dymond is a useful pictorial overview. This book has been OBE due to time and has been overcome by better tools. You do not need this one. Get Paulk and Dymond instead.
Rating: Summary: This is a "must-read" for you and your team! Review: .... After 20 years of experience in software development, QA, testing, and project management, I have not found a better book on implementing SEI's CMM than Kim Caputo's book: "CMM Implementation Guide: Choreographing Software Process Improvement". In my opinion, "CMM Implementation Guide: Choreographing Software Process Improvement" is well-written, easy to read, insightful, in-depth, and provides you with the basic knowledge and tools that will increase your chance for a successful implementation of CMM. If you want to improve your software development processes, reduce cost, deliver on-time, increase overall software quality, and increase customer satisfaction, then Kim Caputo's book, "CMM Implementation Guide: Choreographing Software Process Improvement," is a must read for you and your team. This book provides a step-by-step guide on how to go from CMM level 1 to 5 in eight chapters with some diligence, hard work, and practice. The book also contains 15 appendices that provide more in-depth detail on the specific processes, documentation, and techniques, which I found very helpful and will be utilizing in the near future. I enjoyed Kim Caputo's ability to make the seemingly complicated task of implementing CMM more simplified with her "ready, aim, fire" approach that will ensure a successful CMM implementation. Kim Caputo brings her experience as a dancer and a software professional together to describe the CMM implementation approach, which makes for more interesting reading. She provides a realistic view and approach to implementing CMM and deals with some of the key issues that will keep you from being successful such as management's view of the value of CMM, the culture of the organization, and the basic human resistance to change. You can tell that Kim has "been there, done that" and has gone through the tedious process of and the lessons learned from implementing the CMM. The experiences that Kim describes matched many of my past experiences when trying to make process improvements. The book provides and describes the tools and techniques that were developed at the Unisys Corporation to help ensure success in implementing the CMM process. I really appreciate how Kim Caputo reinforces that there are no silver bullets or special pills that can make a CMM implementation easier. Kim reminds us that a CMM implementation is a constant, on-going process of improvement that requires choreographed teamwork and practice. The book comes with a CD-ROM that contains all of the basic documentation and forms needed to successfully implement CMM, as discussed in her book. The material on the CD-ROM is worth more than the price of the book. Chairman, Southern California Quality Assurance Association - Orange County Chapter (SCQAA-OC; [URL])
Rating: Summary: A brilliant view of the CMM Review: I have worked in the area of software process improvement for many years, and I have literally dozens of books on the subject. Some I've read once, most I've read two or three times... and then there are a very small group of books that are falling apart, held together by all the "sticky notes" and hilighting and paper clip bookmarks -- these three or four books are never found on the bookshelf, because they are always in use. And of those select books, only one was NOT written by Watts Humphrey; it is this book by Kim Caputo. Her use of the analogy of dance, from her own personal background, gives a refreshing and *different* perspective to a highly technical subject. After reading Watts Humphrey's books, *I* understand the CMM and SPI... after reading Kim Caputo's book, I can make *others* understand. And that, to me, has made this book worth its weight in gold.
Rating: Summary: A brilliant view of the CMM Review: I have worked in the area of software process improvement for many years, and I have literally dozens of books on the subject. Some I've read once, most I've read two or three times... and then there are a very small group of books that are falling apart, held together by all the "sticky notes" and hilighting and paper clip bookmarks -- these three or four books are never found on the bookshelf, because they are always in use. And of those select books, only one was NOT written by Watts Humphrey; it is this book by Kim Caputo. Her use of the analogy of dance, from her own personal background, gives a refreshing and *different* perspective to a highly technical subject. After reading Watts Humphrey's books, *I* understand the CMM and SPI... after reading Kim Caputo's book, I can make *others* understand. And that, to me, has made this book worth its weight in gold.
Rating: Summary: If you are learning CMM, this book will not help you. Review: I was very disappointed in this book. I found it to be too much touchy feely and fluffy, and too little substance. Other than trying to compare setting up a CMM program to choreographing a ballet (which didn't do it for me), I found nothing insightful about this book. I have a large CMM library that I frequently reference, but this is one book definitely collecting dust. I would recommend not wasting your money as there are far better books on the market that address the subject in far greater depth and breadth.
Rating: Summary: If you are learning CMM, this book will not help you. Review: The book spends an overwhelming portion of its content focusing on a ballet and how it relates to CMM. As an author, I got the impression she was using this as a technique to meet her page quota. The author overuses glittering generalizations about how to manage people and an organization. In that sense, this book is a rehash of useless management fluff from the 80s. This book contains about 15-20 pages worth of useful information and should cost $10. I will never buy a book published by UNISYS again.
Rating: Summary: Great CPI/CMM "Jumpstarter"!!!!! Review: This book beats anything by others on adopting the CMM. Others take the "overkill" approach of orienting one with massive technically oriented information (which is sometimes akin to "sinking sampans with nukes versus 500 hundred pounders with fuse extenders"). This book is a breath of fresh air in getting introduced to how to implement/adopt technology such as the CMM. I say this book beats anything by others because there is no "techno-babble" to deal with. Ms. Caputo's use of dance choreography is pertinent as it emphasized to me that the typical technology adoption approach of Level 1 organizations of MBSAUYBII (management by stumbling around until you bump into it) is truly "chaotic". What we are really trying to achieve as we go from level to level is a fluid, organized approach that will truly support a smooth transition to a new corporate software engineering paradigm. An added bonus is the included CD which helps o! ne jumpstart the management briefings which are critical to initiating a continuous process improvement (CPI) program. The low price tag saved me thousands of dollars in establishing and initiating my CPI program.
Rating: Summary: Good SEI CMM-styled SEPG strategic and tactical guidance Review: This book contains good strategic guidance for Software Engineering Institute (SEI) Capability Maturity Model (CMM)-styled Software Engineering Process Groups (SEPGs), on how to conduct the challenging and ever elusive endeavor of software process improvement (SPI). This book obviously draws from the author's extensive personal background and experience managing and performing SPI. Additionally, this book also contains tactical level guidance for pursuing the fulfillment of the SEI's CMM Level 2 Key Process Areas (KPAs), which is greatly in demand. The author consciously, deliberately, and most thoughtfully targeted the needs of the majority of organizations that undertake SEI CMM-styled SPI. I won't hesitate to recommend this book.
Rating: Summary: About overcoming politics and human nature - great advice Review: This book is not really about the technical aspects of implementing the key processes and attaining a specific level of maturity. It's about something much more difficult - overcoming organizational resistance to change. The path to achieving capability levels 2 through 5 are well defined in other books. Each process area and its requirements are well documented in Mark Paulk's authoritative book. From the technical perspective it may be cut and dried, and in a perfect world not populated by those illogical creatures called people Mr. Paulk's book is all you need. Unfortunately people are not logical and a clearly laid out roadmap is not enough. You quickly discover that the path to even CMM level 2 is fraught with perils that are strangely missing from the technical books on CMM. Overcoming these perils are what Ms. Caputo's book is all about. She describes techniques for overcoming the resistance to implementation. Instead of rehashing what you need to implement in order to get to a specific level, she tells you how to accomplish the implementation part - the part that is not cut and dried. She does this by relating her own experience, and I can assure you that if you're tasked with implementing CMM (or any other program or initiative for that matter) you can learn a lot about human and organizational nature from this book. You will also learn a lot about what works when effecting change and how to counter the inevitable resistance you'll run into. If you're looking for CMM technical and process-related information get The Capability Maturity Model: Guidelines for Improving the Software Process by Mark Paulk. If you are actually responsible for implementing it get this book.
Rating: Summary: Didn't meet expectations Review: This book is OK at best. I was looking specifically for some guidance in process definition and had high expectations for this book, especially because it's published by Addison Wesley. Unfortunately, I really didn't get much out of it. There's one thing, however, that just about drove me batty -- Caputo spends a great deal of time developing "striking analogies to dance." I found this rather useless. As a typical software professional, am I expected to gain insight into the items being presented with the help of a comparison to an unusual profession? Analogies can be used to aid understanding when the analogy maps the new concept onto one the audience is already familiar with. The space taken to make the constant comparisons could have been better used to provide additional annecdotal evidence.
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