Cockburn Scale
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The Cockburn Scale, also known as the Project Classification Scale, is a method of describing how much formal process a software
project A project is any undertaking, carried out individually or collaboratively and possibly involving research or design, that is carefully planned to achieve a particular goal. An alternative view sees a project managerially as a sequence of even ...
requires. The scale was described in
Alistair Cockburn Alistair Cockburn ( ) is an American computer scientist, known as one of the initiators of the agile movement in software development. He cosigned (with 17 others) the Manifesto for Agile Software Development. Life and career Cockburn starte ...
's book ''Agile Software Development''. According to the author, the scale can be applied to other types of project, not only those that employ Agile methodologies.


Definition

The Cockburn Scale categorizes projects according to "criticality" and "size". Process criticality is defined as the worst probable effect of an unremedied defect: * Loss of Life (L) * Loss of Essential Money (E) * Loss of Discretionary Money (D) * Loss of Comfort (C) Process size is defined as the size of the project's development staff. It is an open-ended scale, but the most commonly used values are 6, 20, 40, 100, and 200. A project is described by a pair of criticality and size indicators: for example, a two-person, life-critical project is categorized as a L6, while a 50-person project that, if it fails, could jeopardize the profits of an organization but not the organization's continued existence is categorized as a D100.


Application of the Scale

The criticality and size of a project can be juxtaposed on a grid: Project classes further from the bottom left corner of the table require a more formal process than project classes closer to the bottom left corner.


References

{{cite book , last = Larman , first = Craig , title = Agile & Iterative Development: A Manager's Guide , publisher = Addison-Wesley Professional , date = 2004 , isbn = 0-13-111155-8


External links


Methodology per project
- Alistair Cockburn's article in which he defines the scale that is now known as the Cockburn Scale
Cockburn Scale discussion
- An extract of the relevant discussion by Alistair Cockburn
A Practical Guide to Seven Agile Methodologies
- uses the Cockburn Scale to compare different Agile methodologies and their applicability. Software metrics