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The Goal

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The Goal

How do you optimize throughput in any systems process?

Goldratt's book is extremely useful to any techncial expert, whether in software development, or a surgeon in the Operating Room of the Future. It is written as a novel, easy and fun to read, and based on sophisticated mathematical principles.

The book shows that any industrial (or software, or clinical) process is a complex adaptive system. It is not possible to directly optimize the whole system because side effects overwhelm any analysis. The key to optimization is to look for bottlenecks. What is getting in the way? Remove the obvious bottleneck and throughput will increase. Then the next bottleneck with appear. By adopting a strategy of eliminating bottlenecks one by one, the system will evolve into radically improved throughput. This is why the third key question in a SCRUM every day is, "What is blocking progress?" The primary responsibility of management is not managing a SCRUM. It is removing bottlenecks identified by the SCRUM.

Goldratt. Eliyahu M. The Goal : A Process of Ongoing Improvement, 2nd Revised Edition. North River Press, 1992

Certainly the best novel on project management ever written and probably one of the most sophisticated project management books. Based on constraint theory, it's a business school favorite.

You can make many process improvements, but just as in tuning a computing system, one local bottleneck is always controlling throughput. If you miss

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