Given that the ideal is an inverse correlation between business risk and financial risk, would it be fair to say that: if the company presents low business risk, they would (ideally) open up to greater financial risk? I know the logic doesn’t necessitate this being the case (BR+ -> FR- does not imply BR- -> FR+) but would it make sense as a general rule of thumb?
10/10 - great and accurate interpretation of financial-risk analysis. It was clear, concise, and to the point of math & analytics don’t lie. This would’ve broadened all horizons if I had watched this much earlier. Good job!
What a great introduction to SCRUM. I love the explanation and example for user stories. Mostly, people think about what features they would want and simply list them. But really taking the time, to formulate a proper story out of the user´s view is a great way to get behind the pains and necessities and really feel the need to add a feature or change something. I work at Zenkit, and we have developed a project management solution that allows for the implementation of SCRUM. Recently, we have published a blog article giving an introduction to the SCRUM methodology. I would really like to hear your thoughts. blog.zenkit.com/scrum-101-an-introduction-to-scrum-project-management-f157aeaa7de7