I remember reading an article in one of the contractor magazines several years ago about the BEER factor. Essentially it was a number that you multiply any estimate by in order to return the time it will actually take. It took into account code rework, changes to specifications, availability of personnel and other effects depending on the situation.
I remember that the article was quite clear that the resulting factor was usually around 2.5 and a good PM in an ideal situation could get it down to about 2.1. Anyone claiming a BEER factor of less than 2 was lying.
It was a tongue-in-cheek piece but had some good information too. I can't find anything online (searching on "BEER" doesn't really help) and I know that BEER was an acronym but that's about it.
Does anyone else remember this?
I remember that the article was quite clear that the resulting factor was usually around 2.5 and a good PM in an ideal situation could get it down to about 2.1. Anyone claiming a BEER factor of less than 2 was lying.
It was a tongue-in-cheek piece but had some good information too. I can't find anything online (searching on "BEER" doesn't really help) and I know that BEER was an acronym but that's about it.
Does anyone else remember this?
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