DocumentCode
992286
Title
Software benchmarking
Author
Jones, Capers
Author_Institution
Software Productivity Res. Inc., Burlington, MA, USA
Volume
28
Issue
10
fYear
1995
fDate
10/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
102
Lastpage
103
Abstract
In software, “benchmarking” usually compares two companies´ practices and results, but, occasionally, it involves sets of companies. For example, there are benchmark comparisons of industry software, such as insurance software, military software, telecommunication software, commercial software, and the like. In other domains, “benchmark” usually means the collection of a substantial body of quantitative data. Benchmark comparisons of various computers, for example, rate their relative performance in at least half a dozen categories. Historically, software benchmarks have been qualitative rather than quantitative. Even the Software Engineering Institute´s Capability Maturity Model (SEI CMM) is essentially a qualitative benchmark that ranks company performance on a five-point scale that lacks quantification for specific quality and productivity levels
Keywords
human resource management; software management; software performance evaluation; Capability Maturity Model; Software Engineering Institute; benchmark comparisons; company performance; company practices; industry software; productivity levels; qualitative benchmarks; quality levels; quantitative data collection; relative performance; software benchmarking; Capability maturity model; Communication industry; Computer industry; Defense industry; Insurance; Military communication; Military computing; Software engineering; Software quality; Telecommunication computing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/2.467614
Filename
467614
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