{"id":804,"date":"2012-02-13T10:17:24","date_gmt":"2012-02-13T15:17:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blog.mightyverse.com\/?p=804"},"modified":"2013-03-18T11:40:50","modified_gmt":"2013-03-18T18:40:50","slug":"making-decisions-with-the-five-whys","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.mightyverse.com\/2012\/02\/making-decisions-with-the-five-whys\/","title":{"rendered":"Making decisions with the Five Whys"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last month we released an update of the Mightyverse web site with fewer features, but with new homepage and FAQ which we hope will help people understand our mission and where we are going.\u00a0 For the last six months, it had felt like we would never finish our upgrade to Rails 3, as Mightyverse development had intermittent spurts of development.\u00a0 In early January, I proposed that we make some hard decisions and ship it earlier by radically cutting any feature that was under-performing in terms of web traffic, which included the search feature.\u00a0 We defined an “MVP” (Minimally Viable Product where the goal is not to create the minimum amount of software from which you can learn).\u00a0 We had just one new feature implemented (changing the URL of the “phrase page”), so that became the one we would test.<\/p>\n
Dropping the search feature was a very hard decision, but not as hard as drawing the line on the smaller details.\u00a0 I argued that whatever was wrong we could always fix the day after we release the site, because there could be something even more important to work on that we don’t know about.<\/p>\n
It was mid-January and I had told Lee and Curtis who were collaborating with me on developement that we would complete the bare minimum to release the site.\u00a0 Glen, Paul, and Iku tested on our staging server. I queued up a subset of bugs found to be fixed before release and our launch date quickly slipped further into the future.\u00a0 Curtis sent this email:<\/p>\n
I noticed a big list of MVP stories.<\/p>\n
I understand that the current MVP is very lacking, but I would encourage releasing it … if only to catalog the feedback from the users. My thought is that this can be valuable get an external perspective.<\/p>\n
By no means is this a hard and fast rule, but it has worked at times in the past to develop a system in concert with the community.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
To which I responded:<\/p>\n
…there are humans involved.\u00a0 Sometimes compromise is important.\u00a0 I would have not completed the phrase list page, but Paul uses that to demo to people.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
To understand the debate, you need to know that the phrase list page was pretty awful.\u00a0 At the time that we were having this discussion it looked like this:
\n<\/a>
\nwith the video player way at the bottom of the page, like this:
\n<\/a><\/p>\n