Planning

July 15, 2004 at 4:50 pm — Glossary, Process

On the Agile Project Management mailing list, in the midst of an enthusiastic dialogue about the value of planning, Clarke Ching asked the clarifying and orienting question, “What is planning?”

My answer:

plan
  1. v. To select assumptions, expectations, constraints, intentions, and commitments to inform decisions about a course of action.
  2. n. A description of a set of assumptions, expectations, constraints, intentions, and commitments selected to inform decisions about a course of action.

Before Clarke asked, I didn’t know that that’s what I meant by planning. That qualifies the question as a good one.

[Update 4:55 PM: Added "intentions."]

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4 Comments »

Comment by Dale Emery — July 16, 2004 at 7:21 am

Looks like I outsmarted myself with this one. Steven Gordon, on the Agile Project Management list, offered definitions that are far simpler and cleaner than mine: A plan is a course of action. Planning is making a plan.

I’ve been thinking a lot about planning, especially about the purposes for planning and about how planning serves those purposes. I tried to stuff all of that into my definitions.

Why plan? To inform decisions about the course of action described in the plan.

How does planning inform those decisions? By making explicit our expectations, assumptions, intentions, constraints, and commitments, so that we can scrutinize them and make inferences from them.

Those ideas about planning—the purposes and benefits—are important ideas. But they aren’t the defining ideas. The defining ideas are the ones Steven suggests: A plan is a course of action. Planning is making a plan.

Comment by Dean F — July 17, 2004 at 4:17 am

Why plan?

A lot of people hate to plan. It hems them in, it is constricting, it is pointless since the plans will eventually fail in any event, etc.

But the best reason I have found for planning is that it creates a web of thinking, images, stuff that helps to see those things that are pertinent to what you are trying to accomplish. Without the planning important things would pass by unnoticed. Planning helps catch thoughts to enrich/enable purposeful action.

Comment by Frank Patrick — July 18, 2004 at 8:30 pm

Dean — I prefer your definition to Steven’s. Maybe that’s because I see a plan not as a simple list of anticipated actions, but something that “[makes] explicit our expectations, assumptions, intentions, constraints, and commitments” as well.

Comment by Michael Arnoldus — September 27, 2004 at 11:12 am

Maybe a plan is a model of the world which defines the meaning of our project. We need a model/abstraction to be able to to even speak coherently about what goes on in the project. This would explain why a plan is very important even though we know it will fail - it defines our expectations, assumptions, intentions, constraints, and commitments - our model of project-world.

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