I doubt that. You may have delivered flawless code to a specification, but who knows if most of it even mattered, the tings that did actually just did a half-arsed job, and everything just marginally lived up to the expectations?
I work on fairly large systems where we have 50 teams (or more, I don't even know) and it's hugely inefficient. Asking the right question at the right occasion can save millions, although it's more likely that they are asked to late when it's just embarrassing at best.
I doubt that. You may have delivered flawless code to a specification, but who knows if most of it even mattered, the tings that did actually just did a half-arsed job, and everything just marginally lived up to the expectations?
I work on fairly large systems where we have 50 teams (or more, I don't even know) and it's hugely inefficient. Asking the right question at the right occasion can save millions, although it's more likely that they are asked to late when it's just embarrassing at best.