Burn Down Chart | Glossary

Definition

A ‘Burn Down Chart’  is a graphical representation of the amount of work left to do, and the time available to do it in. The work remaining( or backlog) is placed on the vertical axis, with the time left, along the horizontal axis. So in simple terms, it can be defined as a run chart of outstanding work. Whilst often used in Agile Software Development methodologies such as Scrum, they can be applied to any project that contain measurable progress over time.

The chart is usually displayed at a place on the wall of a project room. Adopting this practice results in up-to-date project status being visible to each member of the team. As a result, it encourages the team members to confront any and all difficulties, both ahead of schedule, and in a more decisive manner. Their simplicity is another reason why they’re so effective.

Further Reading

  •  “The Art of Agile Development”(book), by James Shore

Agile IT Organization Design: for Digital Transformation and Continuous Delivery| Book Series

Overview: In this book, the author Sriram Narayan is a veteran IT management consultant at ThoughtWorks, who shows how to incorporate agility throughout your organization. The author draws more than 15 years of experience in working with enterprise clients in IT-intensive industries. In this book, the author introduces an agile approach to “Business–IT Effectiveness” that is as practical as it is valuable. The author shows how structural, political, operational, and cultural facets of organization design influence overall IT agility—and how you can promote better collaboration across diverse functions, from sales and marketing to product development, and engineering to IT operations. Through real examples, the author helps you evaluate and improve organization designs that enhance autonomy, mastery, and purpose: the key ingredients for a highly motivated workforce. 

Authors:

Sriram Narayan

Published In:

2015