Death_march_(software_development) Death_march_(software_development)

Death march (software development) - Definition and Overview

This article is about the use of this term in software development. For real death marches, see death march.

In software development and software engineering industry, a death march is a dysphemism for a project that is destined to fail. Usually it is a result of unrealistic or overly optimistic expectations in scheduling, feature scope, or both. The knowledge of the doomed nature of the project weighs heavily on the psyche of its participants, as if they are helplessly watching the team as it marches into the sea. Often, the death march will involve desperate attempts to right the course of the project by asking team members to work especially gruelling hours, weekends, or by attempting to "throw bodies at the problem" with varying results, often causing burnout.

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