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by clairity
1260 days ago
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no, the bullwhip effect is caused by uncertainty across coupled tasks along the critical path, no matter the level of detail of your plan. it's a statistical phenomenon that you can mitigate with other measures, like critical chain. the empire state building example shows that they reduced coupling by creating 4 separate, independent workflows, mitigating the bullwhip effect by roughly a factor of 4. |
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If one defines plan to mean "We schedule everything up front and then stick our fingers in our ears and say 'la la la la' when reality conflicts with our imagined schedule" then of course plans are bad. Similarly if one were to define agile as "a system that is incapable of delivering any feature that takes more than 2-4 weeks to develop" then agile would be bad too.