Peter Sterpe
assistant professor of the practice at Carroll School of Management

Schools
- Carroll School of Management
Links
Biography
Carroll School of Management
EDUCATION
S.M., Computer Science, MIT 1985
S.B., Computer Science, MIT 1985
EXPERTISE/RESEARCH INTERESTS
Professor Sterpe''s background ranges from hands-on software development to managing complex technical organizations, and spans consulting, start-up and corporate environments. He is a proven team builder, writer, speaker, and facilitator, and has developed enterprise caliber software products as well as internal business systems. He has held a number of VP Engineering roles and has the reputation among c-suite executives for providing credible advice from whiteboard to boardroom. Professor Sterpe places great emphasis on the communication and consensus building skills needed to bridge the divide between business stakeholders and technologists.
Professor Sterpe is interested in the use of software to support organizational collaboration and knowledge management. He has also written industry analysis for Forrester Research on the challenges faced by managers of software development organizations, including rescuing derailed projects, measuring productivity, and improving estimates of how long software projects will take.
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
- Schwaber, Carey with Peter Sterpe, Marc Cecere, Mike Gilpin, David D''Silva, “Best Practices: Estimating Development Projects.” Forrester Research. (April 2008).
- Sterpe, Peter with Carey Schwaber, Mike Gilpin, Alex Cullen, Kahini Ranade, “App Dev Managers Should Measure Team Productivity.” Forrester Research. (December 2007).
- Sterpe, Peter with Carey Schwaber, Jacqueline Stone, David D''Silva, “Rescuing Train Wrecks: Putting Derailed Software Projects Back On Track.” Forrester Research. (August 2007).
- Sterpe, Peter with Carey Schwaber, Jacqueline Stone, “Ten Mistakes That Send Development Projects Off Track.” Forrester Research. (June 2007).
Professor Sterpe is interested in the use of software to support organizational collaboration and knowledge management. He has also written industry analysis for Forrester Research on the challenges faced by managers of software development organizations, including rescuing derailed projects, measuring productivity, and improving estimates of how long software projects will take.
Professor Sterpe is interested in the use of software to support organizational collaboration and knowledge management. He has also written industry analysis for Forrester Research on the challenges faced by managers of software development organizations, including rescuing derailed projects, measuring productivity, and improving estimates of how long software projects will take.
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