Author Bio
“The biggest benefit for us is the efficiency in completing and gaining agreement on requirements and testing procedures.”
In 1967, computer scientist and programmer Melvin Conway put forward the idea that a system will tend to reflect the structure of the organization that designed it. Conway’s law has shaped software development practices ever since.
We sat down with Clive Thompson, a columnist for Wired and a longtime contributor to Smithsonian and The New York Times Magazine, to learn more about the history of women in software – and why that history has been largely forgotten.
Systems thinking encourages teams to ask the right questions – before charging ahead under the assumption that they already know the answers. For product teams grappling with exceptionally complex design specs and requirements, systems thinking opens the door to procedure-level improvements and the ability to take full advantage of solutions that support them.
It’s in the name: Jama Connect™ gives you superior visibility into every stage of your product development process by connecting stakeholders with the right information at the right time. The result is better collaboration within and across teams, so delayed replies and ambiguous feedback won’t hamper your forward progress.
For today’s post, we spoke with one of our Jama Support Community power users — frequent contributors with great questions and powerful insights into using Jama — about how their organization uses Jama and the value they’ve seen from the Support Community.
As 2019 gets further underway, we’re thinking about the changes we can expect from the requirements management space this year. To get a feel for requirements management trends in 2019 and beyond, we spoke with three requirements experts at Jama Software.
To recap the busy year, we compiled a list of some of the most notable moments from companies that are pushing the boundaries of what’s possible.
You have a wealth of information available to you in Jama Connect, but it’s only helpful if you can find what you need when you need it. Here are three tips for finding data quickly and easily.