How are you measuring increased productivity? Honest question, because I've seen teams claim more code, but I've also seen teams say they're seeing more unnecessary churn (which is more code).
I'm interested in business outcomes, is more code or perceived velocity translating into benefits to the business? This is really hard to measure though because in pretty much any startup or growing company you'll see better business outcomes, but it's hard to find evidence for the counterfactual.
same as we have before LLMs for a decade - story points. we move faster now, we have automated stuff we could never automate before. same project, largely same team since 2016, we just get a lot more shit done, a lot more
hehe not snarky at all - great question. this was heavily discussed but in order to measure productivity gains (we are phasing this out now) we kept the estimations the same as before. as my colleague put it you don’t estimate based on “10x developer” so we applied the same concept. now that everyone is “on board” we are phasing this out
Thanks, I'm probably a kook but I've never wanted to put any non-product, user-visible feature-related tasks on the board with story points (tests, code cleanup, etc) and just folded that into the related user work (mainly to avoid some product person thinking they "own" that and can make technical decisions).
So the product velocity didn't exactly go up, but you are now producing less technical debt (hopefully) with a similar velocity, sounds reasonable.
I'm glad you're more productive, although I would question this result both in terms of objectivity (story points are typically very subjective), and in terms of capturing all externalities of the LLM workflow. It's easy to have "build the thing", "fix the thing", "remove tech debt in the thing", "replace the thing" be 4 separate projects, each with story points, where "build the better thing" would have been one, and churn is something that is evidenced with LLM development.
I'm interested in business outcomes, is more code or perceived velocity translating into benefits to the business? This is really hard to measure though because in pretty much any startup or growing company you'll see better business outcomes, but it's hard to find evidence for the counterfactual.