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In 1967 I submitted a paper called "How Do Committees Invent?" to the Harvard Business Review. HBR rejected it on the grounds that I had not proved my thesis. I then submitted it to Datamation, the major IT magazine at that time, which published it April 1968. Here is one form of the paper's thesis:
Fred Brooks cited the paper and the idea in his elegant classic "The Mythical Man-Month," calling it "Conway's Law." The name stuck. Following is an extract from an article in Wikipedia. (The concept originated in the software world but is not limited to any specific domain.)
Brooks recognized that the law has important corollaries in management theory. Here is one stated in the paper.
In retrospect, HBR's basis for rejecting the paper says more about differences in notions of "proof" than it does about the paper. The text of the paper is here. [Note: I assume no responsibility for information in other Web sites. The reference to Fred Brooks in Wikipedia, for example, was accurate to the best of my knowledge at the time I created the link to it, but it is subject to change beyond my control (as is all information on the Web not in this site).]
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"Conway's Law" |