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It was just mentioned that I'm "not exactly building the Sistine Chapel." This is true, but I am building a freight management application, which isn't exactly as simple as drawing controls on a form (even though the vendors would have you believe it is).

I don't hold this against the person who said it, but I do feel the complexity of what I'm doing is a little misunderstood, or that statement would not have been made.

Are there any good metaphors which might illustrate a project's complexity to non-programmers?

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@William Brendel-Thanks, but I don't think that is necessarily a dupe. The other question is looking for a very general metaphor for what he does, I'm looking for a metaphor to communicate the general level of complexity. .... which I believe is a totally different question. – John MacIntyre Aug 14 at 14:32
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say, "Michelangelo was just paintin'" or maybe, "well, call me Michelangelo." – johnny Aug 14 at 15:41
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Community wiki? – Josh Stodola Aug 14 at 21:04
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A metaphor won't do you any good if the person doesn't understand it either. You should try to explain the complexity to the individual in terms they can understand. If possible try to relate it to a complex work situation they might experience.

For an accountant you could say something like: "This is like you taking a calculator and auditing the US Federal Reserve by yourself"

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+1 … good metaphors always play on things the audience knows. – Konrad Rudolph Aug 14 at 14:09
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+1 As a friend of mine in college used to say: A bad metaphor is like a Coke can... – Brian Postow Aug 14 at 18:03
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maybe you can not tell why it is complex but you may reference labour on complexity.

you can tell that it is so complex that 10 people should work on this project 2 years?

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I don't know ... that could kind of back fire with the wrong person. ;-) – John MacIntyre Aug 14 at 14:23
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No.

Honestly, there aren't.

The best you can do is have the end user role-play the computer, so that they have to think through each use case until they realize how innately complex the process is.

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I can't help myself, but I just must post this video from That Mitchell & Webb Look:

Brain Surgeon - That Mitchell & Webb Look , Series 3 - BBC Two

That out of the way, it might help to demonstrate that planning a software project involves many of the same problems as planning the construction of – oh, say, a chapel. You've got a lot of very different aspects to manage and if someone makes a mistake at the very basis, the whole think would break down.

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It's not rocket surgery.

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+1 Yes! This is perfect, if the person has a sense of humor – Doomspork Aug 14 at 14:06
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Brilliant! – Rev316 Aug 14 at 19:53
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