|
|
|
|
|
by TameAntelope
2022 days ago
|
|
Probably, but to represent the non-sarcastic point of view, it comes down to "[person] in the room" syndrome[1]. Spending 2-3 weeks on a bug is never good, if you're not communicating progress, and one way to communicate progress is to break down the work into smaller chunks. Does it literally have to be individual JIRA tickets? No way, but going off for 2-3 weeks doesn't give the business the insight it needs to in order to wisely invest time/effort into work being executed. [1] https://medium.com/machine-words/a-guy-in-a-room-bbbe058645e... (I thought Joel Spolsky said this but I can't actually find the original source, if anyone has it I'd appreciate it!) |
|
Assuming that it is important to fix the bug and that the developer is competent and trusted - why not? What would communicating progress improve here?
Mind that you cannot communicate when it is done (otherwise it would not be a hard bug) you can only communicate what you have done so far and what you try next. But what kind of business value does that create?