Friday, June 30, 2006

I was driving back to the office the other day from lunch when I came across a funny thing. On the side of the road was a caution sign indicating there would be street sweeping for the next five miles. I moved into the left-hand lane expecting to come across a few slow-moving sweeper vehicles on the right cleaning up. And if that were what I ended up seeing, I'd have had nothing to add, however the scene I saw had me laughing so hard I almost drove off the road.

As I approached the flashing lights ahead, I passed a Massachusetts state highway truck on the side of the road with a crew standing there. To my surprise there was no sweeper vehicle in sight, but rather one of the crew leaning against the truck taking a break and he was holding a broom! Yes, a broom! I have to imagine that sweeping any road by hand is a nearly impossible task and I assume that the crew was simply doing some clean up that the vehicles couldn't get too. But it still struck my funny bone pretty hard.

After I regained my composure (and control of my car) I got to thinking about the metaphor I had just witnessed. You might have a tool that will do the job, but do you have the experience to know if your selection of tool was the best it could be? Yes my friend on the side of the road with the broom could have swept the entirety of Route 9 West, but he would probably retire before he finished the job.

Whenever I approach a project I ask myself several quesitons:

  1. Have I seen this type of project before, and if so, what worked then?
  2. What didn't work then? Should I use the same tool again?
  3. Is there a related project that might have a similar solution to the one at hand?
  4. If the tool can do the job, is it the best tool for the job?
  5. Have newer, better tools been built since then?
  6. Can I make an existing tool better?
  7. Should I build a tool to do the job?

These and other questions (and I suppose their answers) have been developed because of the depth of experiences that I've come across over the years. Using that I think I've typically made the right choice more often than not.

So next time you want to sweep the highway, don't just grab the closest broom you can get your hands on or may never finish what you start out to accomplish.

Friday, June 30, 2006 3:05:43 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer    Comments [0]