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We are building an ASP.NET application.

Here I need to make time estimate for the entire application. At present I am using my past experience and some thumb rules to arrive to a rough estimate.

So now my doubt is that do people use past experience and few thumb rules to make it or use some common methodologies/practices such as Cocomo or Functional point analysis etc.?

If so would you please refer the best links for these so that I could go through them and start practicing.

Many Thanks, Regards. Bhavna.

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  • Excellent question, to which I am tempted to quote Hofstadter's Law: "It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's Law.", but hope to see more helpful responses. I've up-voted the question and will be back to see replies. Nice questions. Oct 22, 2009 at 6:57
  • stackoverflow.com/search?q=estimate+time =)
    – J. Steen
    Oct 22, 2009 at 7:05

4 Answers 4

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Steve McConnell wrote a good book on the topic: http://amzn.com/0735605351

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The only way to achieve an accurate estimate is:

1) The job is (practically) identical to one you've done previously.

2) Break tasks down until each task is less than 4 hours in duration.

(1) is rarely the case, and (2) is hard!

Identify and Manage your risks: Identify any unknowns or areas which are known (or likely) to be difficult. Monitor these tasks' progress to minimise impact on your project.

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And don't forget, an estimation is nothing more than that, an estimation. It will never be 100% accurate. You can minimize deviations and manage them, like Mitch Wheat said, but bottom line is that an estimation should never be looked at as an exact thing. The problem is convincing management of this principle :)

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  • I agree...Estimation is estimation and seldom met. But one should strive to beat the estimations.
    – Kalpak
    Oct 22, 2009 at 11:13
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Function point analysis is good. But I generally go by this approach.

Identify the roles in the system. Identify the Use Cases of the applications and common and discrete use cases by each role. Bifurcate the Use Cases into High Medium Low complexity. depending on your skill/mandays matrix your organization has, you should be able to estimate the efforts (number of manadys) Depending on the efforts and number of people on the project, you can estimate the calendar days.

Don't forget the documentation, Integration testing, system testing, Peer reviews, User Acceptance testing timings :)

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  • . Hi Kalpak, Thank you very much for the reply and details. Its great. Could you please share ref. links/docs those you have mentioned in your reply. Thanks and Regards...
    – user191773
    Oct 23, 2009 at 5:39

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