The Art of Data-driven Forecasting – Davis

10:00 am -10:45 am

Friday, April 23, 2021

Breakout Room 5

Paper Title:

The Art of Data-driven Forecasting

Abstract:

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This presentation will address the “art” of forecasting for agile-developed products.

Forecasting is a skill is half-art, half-science. The science part of forecasting is easy: estimate product backlog items, track what the agile team completes each iteration, add/remove/re-estimate items on the product backlog, and examine what’s left to do at the end of every iteration (sprint). Using rudimentary statistics, it’s easy to create a probabilistic forecast that shows various possibilities and probabilities of occurrence.

What is not easy is applying the “art” of forecasting. Artful forecasting involves using knowledge, experience and intuition to adjust the team’s forecast to better represent what is likely to occur in the future. Here are (at least) six questions we will explore:

  1. How much team history should I include?
  2. When should I anticipate my team’s reduced capacity to work?
  3. How should I modify my forecast to adjust for expected product backlog growth
  4. How wide should my “cone of uncertainty” be?
  5. When should I override my team’s velocity?
  6. When should I override my team’s standard deviation?

I will demonstrate how to apply the “art” of agile forecasting using Statistical PERT, a freely-licensed, Excel-based spreadsheet that attendees can immediately download and use to create forecasts for their agile-developed products.

(Note: my 2020 UMD PM Symposium presentation, “When Will It Be Done? How To Forecast Answers To Your Toughest Agile Questions” demonstrated the “science” of agile forecasting. This presentation is the “art” of agile forecasting, which involves making choices about how to treat the team’s historical data).

Key take-aways:

  1. Exposure to Statistical PERT, a freely-licensed estimation and forecasting tool which is immediately available to attendees to use
  2. A list of specific questions (with my suggested guidance) on how a forecaster can apply their “art” to the “science” of forecasting

PMI Talent Triangle: Technical Project Management

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