ulteriormotif
Technical User
... he gets a bit tetchy when I reply "how long is a piece of string?"
Background: small/medium company of consultants (not IT). I'm the resident geek - run the network, training staff in general office apps, website and database development (Access). NB: I'm also the FIRST resident geek - it's a developing role that has basically come about because they realised I had skills they could use.
We're starting to develop more and more databases, and they're getting larger and more advanced all the time, and some are now being sold to clients rather than just used in-house.
My problem is setting the budget to build the damn things. Every darn time I end up running over. I know to a degree it's the nature of the beast - or the beasts I work with shifting objectives - but it's an ongoing problem. Just once I'd like to be able to complete a project without an overrun.
Aside from the nature of the beast though, I know it's also my own inexperience with this. I'm entirely self-taught, and while my skills are pretty good after five years or so working with Access, it's still very much ongoing learning, and as tends to happen with self-teaching, "swiss cheese knowledge"... which makes it hard to put a time on how long something is going to take.
Is there some magic formula out there for timelines/pricing databases?
Is there a course I could be looking at doing? I'm definitely interested in learning more, either in terms of a hard-core course in Access (preferably where I wouldn't have to spend forever going over the stuff I do already know though). Are the Microsoft courses worthwhile? Or something more... IT quantity surveyor/project manager type thing that would deal specifically with running these types of projects. I dunno, that's probably overkill. Realistically, filling in the holes in that swiss cheese knowledge might go a long way towards fixing things.
NB: I'm in New Zealand and work full-time. Courses need to be distance self-paced sort of thing.
Or am I pipedreaming? Does setting timelines give you nightmares too?
Background: small/medium company of consultants (not IT). I'm the resident geek - run the network, training staff in general office apps, website and database development (Access). NB: I'm also the FIRST resident geek - it's a developing role that has basically come about because they realised I had skills they could use.
We're starting to develop more and more databases, and they're getting larger and more advanced all the time, and some are now being sold to clients rather than just used in-house.
My problem is setting the budget to build the damn things. Every darn time I end up running over. I know to a degree it's the nature of the beast - or the beasts I work with shifting objectives - but it's an ongoing problem. Just once I'd like to be able to complete a project without an overrun.
Aside from the nature of the beast though, I know it's also my own inexperience with this. I'm entirely self-taught, and while my skills are pretty good after five years or so working with Access, it's still very much ongoing learning, and as tends to happen with self-teaching, "swiss cheese knowledge"... which makes it hard to put a time on how long something is going to take.
Is there some magic formula out there for timelines/pricing databases?
Is there a course I could be looking at doing? I'm definitely interested in learning more, either in terms of a hard-core course in Access (preferably where I wouldn't have to spend forever going over the stuff I do already know though). Are the Microsoft courses worthwhile? Or something more... IT quantity surveyor/project manager type thing that would deal specifically with running these types of projects. I dunno, that's probably overkill. Realistically, filling in the holes in that swiss cheese knowledge might go a long way towards fixing things.
NB: I'm in New Zealand and work full-time. Courses need to be distance self-paced sort of thing.
Or am I pipedreaming? Does setting timelines give you nightmares too?