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I am toying with the idea of giving agile software development teams budgets that they can spend to improve velocity. A typical agile team has 5-9 people.

I want to get a sense of how they might spend the budget.

If you wanted to improve software development on your team (no matter what software process/framework you use) and you had $1000 to spend, how would you spend it?

Similar questions: How would you spend $150 on developer tools?

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Is that thousand per person? per team? per department? How much money per person are we talking about? – David Thornley Jul 10 at 17:17
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Is there a non-open-source tool you can even buy for $150? – jlembke Jul 10 at 17:23
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This should be Community Wiki – Nathan Koop Jul 10 at 18:03
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35 Answers

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vote up 6 vote down

Buy a lot of coffee.

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i vote red bull – Jon Erickson Jul 10 at 17:19
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vote up 28 vote down

A second, 20+ inch LCD monitor for each person or, if that's already the case, better chairs.

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+1 for the better chairs. Every place I've worked I've had to fight for a better chair. Unfortunately I haven't always succeeded. – ChrisF Jul 10 at 17:28
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vote up 16 vote down

I'd get the team:

  • headphones, to remove distractions
  • better keyboards & mice, faster typing etc
  • bigger monitors, better workspace but maybe not feasable with 1k
  • memory as possible, pauses cause context switches, productivity falls

In that order (unless there is a marked lack of memory, then it's first).

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Save on headphones and buy them some Cherry G80-3000 keyboards, the keys are so noisy they cancel ambient sound. – Luper Rouch Jul 10 at 19:33
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vote up 35 vote down

$1000 isn't a lot (eg. to spend on training or something similar). So i would invest it in the tooling and hardware.

  • ReSharper for everyone (if you're a .NET dev group). If you are tight on budget, you can consider just using the free CodeRush Xpress from DevExpress, which is better then nothing.
  • Dual Monitors.
  • Max Memory (this is so cheap nowadays).
  • Books!

Some Various and inexpensive software that I personally use:

  • Beyond Compare - file comparison tool
  • Snag It - screen capture tool
  • RegexBuddy - regular expression helper
  • Ultramon - Enhanced multiple monitor environment, such as having a taskbar for each monitor
  • TeraCopy - faster file copying/moving tool that integrates with windows shell
  • Grep Tool such as WinGrep or BareGrep, although both have free non-registered versions

I would definitely go and ask the team this question though, chances are they know the tools or hardware that they need that will make their jobs easier. After all, they will be the ones using whatever is purchased.

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+1 for ReSharper. Money well spent. – mgroves Jul 10 at 18:21
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+1 for all top 4 options. – Dmitri Nesteruk Jul 10 at 18:22
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+1 for "go and ask the team". They probably have a much better idea of what is going to help them than we do. We can say "get a big monitor!", but if they're running on machines with 1GB of RAM then improving that first is going to be a much bigger win. Ask them. They know. – Beska Jul 10 at 21:21
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+1 for Beyond Compare...so worth the money. – Jonas Jul 13 at 17:03
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+1 for each of BeyondCompare and RegExBuddy, awesome cheap software. I'm almost embarrassed to admit I've never used ReSharper. – cgyDeveloper Jul 17 at 0:08
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I'd spend the $1000 on a banner that says "$1000 is not a significant amount of money in software development!" Licensing pretty much any tools you'd want or need is going to be more than that, and while you can buy a low-end computer that way, if your teams need hardware that badly, you're already starving them to death.

It MIGHT be enough for a book budget for a short while for a small team. MIGHT.

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$ 25,000 – John Rasch Jul 10 at 17:44
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$2,500 per person per year would be more reasonable. – BrianG Jul 10 at 18:29
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This really depends on your team.

Depending on the size of the team, $1000 isn't much. Developer tools go a long way - ie: things like Resharper can do wonders to increase productivity, and are inexpensive.

That being said, if your culture supports it, $1000 can be a very effective motivator as a bonus.... I'd argue that it can bring more results per dollar than any other single thing, if handled property. This is a tricky thing to manage, though, so it really depends on your team.

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Offering a $1K bonus can also really hurt morale and make the team less effective. Don't do this without thinking it over very carefully. You can't measure contributions well enough to make it seem fair. – David Thornley Jul 10 at 17:27
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vote up 1 vote down

As everyone else has noted $1000 isn't going to do a lot in terms of better software. So I'd concentrate of the morale of my developers.

Pizza, Mt. Dew and a nice Espresso machine.

EDIT

Actually I did think of something $1000 would buy. Some testing systems running some kind of VM software. The hardware would probably be around $250 a pop, and you can find CRTs for free. Since no one is going to be using them for prolonged periods this should be fine. Back when I was using Ardence Smart Clients each license went for $125 per system so you could probably get 3 testing systems with $1000.

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A Wii, collection of games/controllers and a reasonably-sized LCD TV. – GalacticCowboy Jul 10 at 17:37
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vote up 3 vote down

Wrist-rests for keyboard and mouse.

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"So I'd concentrate of the morale of my developers."
Me too - how much do tazers cost?

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The tazing will continue until morale improves. – mgroves Jul 10 at 18:20
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For agile teams, you might be interested in agile-oriented project management tools. From what I hear (not having used them myself), both Mingle and Scrum'd are pretty good. If you're not interested in that, ReSharper is an indespensible tool for a .NET developer. You might also look into setting up some sort of continuous integration system.

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+1. ReSharper is fantastic. Also, use SkinnyBoard instead of Scrum'd! – Matt Grande Jul 10 at 18:14
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You could buy a dozen or more books with that. Has everyone on the team read The Pragmatic Programmer?

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vote up 1 vote down

Some flowers and a air humidifier, and a pen if I didn't just break the budget.

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If you have a sufficient number of developers, have a voluntary weekend coding contest to solve some appropriately sized problem relevant to your business. The $1K (or whatever is leftover after paying for pizza, etc.) goes to the winners (or maybe have 1st, 2nd, 3rd prizes). If you group people into teams for this, you will (hopefully) build some esprit de corps.

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vote up 4 vote down

Remember, the fundamental, slowest and most expensive problem in software has nothing to do with tools or productivity - it is knowing that you are building the right thing. Everything else is easier than this.

As far as improving the velocity, you have to know that there are obstacles, then what are they, and how can you remove them, and can the $1000 be used to do this? If there aren't any obstacles, what makes you think the team can increase velocity?

A lot of things which cost almost nothing can improve the environment: reducing pointless meeting requirements, taking out phones, improving stakeholder involvement, etc. All the best practices have been covered in the literature: PeopleWare, Mythical Man-Month, Code Complete, Writing Solid Code, etc.

$1000 won't go far, but it will start a library, so I think books are your best bet. I would let the developers decide how to stock the library. I would also give each developer a marked part of the shelf where there own personal favorite books can be stored, just like a bookstore where the people recommend their favorites. There is also the possibility of Safari subscriptions or ACM or IEEE memberships which come with digital bookshelves.

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vote up 20 vote down

If the team doesn't already have whiteboards in every workspace, both private and shared, change that.

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vote up 1 vote down

Put a high-end SSD and 4GB RAM in every machine. With the $500 you'll have left, get everyone at least 2 20" flatscreens.

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Find me 5 high end ssds, 20gb ram, and ten 20" flatscreens for $1000... – statenjason Jul 10 at 17:52
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vote up 1 vote down

I'd take that money and create more incentives for your programmers. If they have some sort of bonus for making some level of measurable improvement in some aspect of your business, then that can motivate them in a unique way.

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vote up 2 vote down

Oh come on now... no one has said this yet?

Without a doubt, get a copy of FogBugz up and running for your group.

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I would really like to see a host-your-own, single-server, unlimited-user FogBugz license option, I'll give you that. – Paul Hooper Jul 10 at 19:25
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vote up 22 vote down

Take the team out to lunch to a mid-priced restaurant (not pizza, out to lunch) once per week. When the $1000 runs out (that duration depends on your area), fight for more money.

The point being that morale has a huge impact on development speed. Knowing the people you work for/with care about you as a person and not just a resource means you care about them, and what you're doing for them, in the same way. Being motivated to do good work at a good pace can provide just as much speed/velocity/whatever as the best tools (and you can't afford the best commercial tools for $1000)

It's worth consulting the team to see what they prefer, if you have a couple options. If you can take them to lunch every week, or a baseball game twice, ask them what they think. The baseball game outing may sound extremely fun to you if you like baseball, but could be the most boring thing in the world to half the team. (speaking from experience on this one)

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+1 for morale, not sure that lunch does boost morale that much but it can't really hurt either – Eric Jul 10 at 18:15
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vote up 1 vote down

If your teams running on Windows Vista, pre-order Windows 7 and give them the relief that they are finally free.

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vote up 1 vote down

Divvy the money up into a book budget for each team member and send them to this question for ideas. Particularly if they're willing to use AddAll to look for bargains, that'll go at least a little ways to supplementing libraries.

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I would check out Axure, http://www.axure.com/, I haven't treid the free download yet, but I will be soon, and a prototyping tool for even a single person to go through and work out the requirements with the customer would probably help you a lot, and I know that a license is around 500 bucks. Proper design to fit the needs of the customer will probably give you the most bang for your buck.

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AgileZen

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At a thousand dollars, about the best you could do is invest in moving your developers into a dual monitor arrangement. It sounds silly to management, but even if you realize a 1% performance increase that is a pretty great rate of return on a developer's salary.

The interesting part of course, is that research has shown the figure is actually closer to 20-30%!

http://lifehacker.com/software/dual-monitor/dual-monitors-increase-productivity-168488.php

I personally have a 3 monitor arrangement in my home office (a 26" 1680x1050 Samsung that I use to read papers, a 30" 2560x1600 Dell that I use for code and a 42" 1920x1080 HDTV that I run a browser on and keep little bits of clutter on or use when watching presentations. By completely filling my peripheral vision, I don't get distracted nearly as easily. I can always have whatever I need at my finger tips and can cross reference and compare different sources without losing my place or dragging windows out of the way to see.

In the office I use a much less flashy dual monitor arrangement, but it is still a net win over just hunching over the laptop display.

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vote up 1 vote down

$1k isn't enough to make a dent in some of the tools we would benefit by at the office (for example, altova's link text runs $1700 per person.

If all I had were $1k to spend, I'd spend it on books. Like the above folks, I'd ask the crew/team what they're interested in. All our developers have dual monitors already.

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vote up 1 vote down

A good quality coffee machine which would be free to use.

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vote up 1 vote down

I would definitely invest in a big monitor, nice chairs and headphones...

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vote up 1 vote down

Take each development team out for drinks on a Friday and use the $1000 to buy rounds. It will go a long way to cement your leadership and team morale.

Any team will follow a leader to the gates of hell if they know that he/she has their back!

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vote up 2 vote down

$1000 seems to be enough to buy Visual Assist for 5-7 team members in two months. That's only for Visual Studio teams.

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If I have $1000, i would like to invest to buy Ebody chair

That chair is so cool and good for entire body during the programming.

Tiger

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