Jun 172009

Technical debt is an important fundamental concept in the software engineering world, mainly because it pops up quite often in most real-world software projects. As much as I’d like to put the concept in my own words and sprinkle some personal experiences on it, Steve McConnell already wrote two good posts on the topic last year.

The term “technical debt” was coined by Ward Cunningham to describe the obligation that a software organization incurs when it chooses a design or construction approach that’s expedient in the short term but that increases complexity and is more costly in the long term.

Ward didn’t develop the metaphor in very much depth. The few other people who have discussed technical debt seem to use the metaphor mainly to communicate the concept to technical staff. I agree that it’s a useful metaphor for communicating with technical staff, but I’m more interested in the metaphor’s incredibly rich ability to explain a critical technical concept to non-technical project stakeholders.

Technical Debt and Technical Debt Decision Making [from 10x Software Development]

Posted by Bry Tagged with: , ,