Software Development Project Metrics Checklist


Home  >  Checklists  > 

Software Development Project Metrics Checklist


Login/Register to download this item







This checklist will help you gauge how thoroughly your software engineering process is being quantified and measured. It is a list of activities you should take care to build into your planning and development cycles, in order to collect valuable metrics on software quality, amount of code developed, resources used and various progress indicators. If implemented with care, these measurements become lessons learned and guidelines for estimating, conducting and budgeting future projects.





sponsored announcements and special offers
Learn how IT can better guide its strategic investments and operational resource allocation throughout the service lifecycle. With Service Portfolio Management, IT investments and resources are translated into things the business cares about – services. Download the white paper Service Portfolio Management: Manage IT For Business Value.

Download "How to Cut Costs in the Cloud" and discover five best practices for spend management in 2010 inspired by innovations in the cloud, and how they will help companies spend smarter, and save more. Learn more about the emerging field of Cloud Spend Management and what it means for e-Procurement.


96% of customers recommend LiquidPlanner to friends. Small team? Big stack of projects? Decide what's important, decide who can do it, and start making progress today. Schedule, collaborate, and track time in one central place. Start today with a no-risk trial.

Don't re-invent the wheel! Why divert resources to developing business intelligence and analytics functionality when partnering results in improved productivity and more innovation? Check out this IDC white paper from SAP to see why partnering with an established BI vendor presents a compelling economic case.

Register Today and Save 15%!
Earn PDUs and advanced project management credentials 100% online from Villanova University, ranked #1 by U.S. News & World Report. Learn how!



Some editors are failed writers, but so are most writers.
- T. S. Eliot