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I have heard the phrase: "Good, cheap, and fast: pick two."

For programming projects is there usually a "best two?"

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This question needs to be a wiki. – Jonathan Sampson Aug 26 at 14:02
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I also find this a valid question. The fact that it is subjective and argumentative does not mean there will not be interesting and insightful answers. – sleske Aug 26 at 14:12
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Look at the [Project Management Triangle][1]. Every project has three constraints. Scope, Cost, Time (Schedule). These three effect the overall quality. A change to any one will affect the others and you can only maximize two of the constraints. Here's a couple of more links on this: microsofttraining.net/article-338-project-managem… 43folders.com/2005/04/… [1]: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Management_Triangle/… – klabranche Aug 26 at 14:17
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I personally find that questions like this are a breeding ground for uninteresting and repetitive answers that lack much detail or depth. – gnovice Aug 26 at 14:19
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When I hear Good, Cheap and Fast I will look to decrease scope in order to do Good, Cheap and Fast. If they were to say Good and Fast then I hear Cost can rise and scope is variable (changeable) because in order to be Good (quality) while being Fast they have not specified scope or cost. Hopefully this helps. It's definitely easier said than done since most want everything but it's our jobs to always be reminding people in the hopes they will listen. If we don't say anything it won't get better. – klabranche Aug 26 at 14:20
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closed as not a real question by George Stocker, Jimmy, DJ, Steven, AraK Aug 26 at 15:34

20 Answers

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That is entirely dependent on your clients.

If they're willing to pay, good and fast is always the preference...

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agreed, and by the time the developers get involved, the cheap+fast option has usually already been selected. Our challenge is to sneak a bit of good in there as well. – Mark Heath Aug 26 at 14:02
I don't think I could work at a place that was willing to develop crappy code. – tvanfosson Aug 26 at 14:09
It's not that crappy code is the goal...it's just often what comes out. – Michael Haren Aug 26 at 14:23
I was reacting to the need to "sneak a bit of good in there as well." If the business doesn't encourage/insist on high quality code, I'm not sure I would want to work there. – tvanfosson Aug 26 at 14:25
@tvanfosson: ah I see, I completely agree. I can't imagine working somewhere where quality wasn't at least a goal, either. – Michael Haren Aug 26 at 14:29
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It's just a simpler statement of budget vs time vs scope. Two are fixed, one is variable.

The problem is, they pretty much always want all 3...

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The (geeky) way I look at it is that the three are a functon of each other, so that if you pick two, you have also picked the third. – T.E.D. Aug 26 at 14:48
This is the crux of it - it's not meant as a genuine choice, it's meant to show you that your choices for each element has consequences for the others. – Jon Hopkins Aug 28 at 13:10
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I prefer Good and Fast... The business always chooses Cheap and Fast

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I think if you explain the actual costs of "cheap" clearly, business will often choose "good" instead. That's been my experience anyway. – tvanfosson Aug 26 at 14:04
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True. "Cheap" too often ends up being more expensive in the long run...buggy, confusing, – Michael Haren Aug 26 at 14:25
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obviously you don't work for my company... lol... we've been trying to explain and demonstrate the costs. We've shown demonstration after demonstration. Unfortunately, they're only interested in results right now. They don't think a year, a quarter, or even a month ahead. They only think about this week's accomplishments. – BBlake Aug 26 at 14:54
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My experience is that only ONE of them is actually possible

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I always strive to go with Good and Fast. Often what is delivered is Cheap and Fast, sadly.

I think the frequent mistake people make is to go with "cheap" without considering a total cost over the project life cycle, including support and maintenance. If initial bids included these extra items (which I suggest are far more costly for "cheap" projects than non-cheap projects) the cheap option often looks less appealing (and is often the most expensive in the long run).

Just some thoughts from my experience...

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Most engineers will tell you that they want to do good work. That's fairly natural. Almost nobody likes the idea of looking back over their life's work and seeing a ton of cheap crap they made. You'd like to be able to have a little pride in what you spend your life doing.

This isn't restricted to software. If you find yourself a good mechanic, someone who enjoys the work, they will always try to get you to fix things right. For example, they'll push for a $600 engine job on an old used car to fix a bunch of slow oil leaks that won't cost you anywhere near $600 in oil over its lifetime. I used to think they were all looking to bilk me, but that's not it at all. They just want to do the job right.

Understanding that our customers and non-engineer bosses look at us the same way we look at that auto mechanic is the beginning of wisdom.

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It really depends on the project. For startups which have a money constraint, cheap and fast are generally is the best approach. If you have unlimited money, obviously choosing fast and good is the best approach. It varies from situation to situation.

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Another way to look at this is that there are basically four variables that you can control to a greater or lesser extent.

  • Quality
  • Scope
  • Resources
  • Time

Of these four, generally you want to fix Quality high, though there are exceptions. Resources are best added beforehand and thus are also reasonably fixed unless your timeline is very long. The trade-off, then, is usually between Scope (what) and Time (how long). My preference is to reduce Scope and meet deadlines if what I can deliver still has value. Often this is in the context of a particular iteration and the dropped features will be added later, perhaps increasing the overall Time of the project.

In your pantheon, I suppose this would equate to Good and Fast.

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Good and fast !

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AKA Non-Enterprisey – Zoidberg Aug 26 at 14:00
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Personally, I think it usually depends on the nature of the project and quite possibly the clients. Cheap and good are usually for people with low budgets. Good and fast are for clients with a bigger budget and potentially could lead to more projects.

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if you don't want to spend money good and cheap is better

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It depends on the project and the available resources that the customer has. There's no single answer.

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Good is subjective go for cheap and fast. At least that way if it's bad (which is the same as someone else's good) you can throw it away with minimum fuss.

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Empirically, I'd say most projects tend to go with Cheap and Fast. The fraction of Good software I've seen in my life is vanishingly small...

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The best 2 - good & fast

The reality - fast & cheap

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Open Source => Good & Cheap

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The open source poster children -- Linux, Firefox, MySQL -- are good and cheap. Sadly, most open source is just cheap. – Dinah Dec 14 at 21:07
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Like everyone else, I would prefer good and fast.

But I think that's too simplistic. Picking cheap will eventually undercut the good in the long run. Sometimes, choosing fast can too, as innovation should involve a more higher degree of prototyping and testing.

Of course, each project has different conditions (and levels of complexity, innovation, and economies of scale), but generally I think that truly good really means you can't be too cheap or too fast.

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There's a quality that's good enough, a speed that's fast enough, and a price that's cheap enough. If you can't get all three, it's not going to be enough, and you should stop and rethink your project.

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Clients want everything, yesterday, for no cost.

It's finding a balance in each request that helps determine is this something I fight for (Good and Fast) or save them some money because it's not that important or they might not use it as much as they want (Good and Cheap).

The third option, Fast and Cheap, doesn't imply it won't be good to me thought. More like, we are implementing less to meet your budget and timeline and make sure we implement it well.

What about when there isn't an option?

In trying to pick 2 of Good, Fast or Cheap, I use a simple test:

1) How important is it? 2) How complicated is it? 3) How long will it take before you think you can do it faster?

Based on these answers, I try to fight for the following:

- Is it simple? Really? Fast and Cheap is probably good enough. Start with the approach of it will be faster and cheaper if we start with something simple and build it out how you need it, if you need it. Otherwise we will do all this work and have to change it anyways, using up that time anyways. This might be agile development in some ways.

- Is it complicated? Really? If it's so critical and necessary, are you sure you aren't over engineering?

- Can I deliver immediately in bite sizes? How is it that they make do now? Wouldn't even a simple solution that does a few core and critical things, make a big difference over how it's being done now? Then, it's likely better to do less, but do it well and cheap. My rule of thumb is to always start with small victories that have a larger impact than their effort and let them snowball and gain momentum into the big system. No one loves getting a system quicker than they wanted. So, you give it to them, a feature or three at a time. Just make sure your testing and signoff process is there.

Just some ideas, hope it is some food for thought.

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A subjective, non-programming question that did not get closed. Who would have thought that was possible...

edit - dang, looks like I entered my post too soon...

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