The purpose of this report is provide you, the analyst, with insight into how often project personnel receive requests for either features or bug fixes. What is provided is a measure of the rate (frequency) that tickets are entered into the tracking system and the volume, or backlog of requests.
As a product matures, end users typically become complacent with the existing product features and naturally desire additional capabilities or new requirements via feature requests. Early evaluation of these requests is fundamental in maintaining customer satisfaction and allocating resources commensurate with the needs of the product team. With respect to bugs, not all defects are disastrous but they should be caught early so that timely repairs are made as soon as possible. This equates to the Mean Time to Repair/Recover (MTTR) metric. The customer ticket rate coupled with the customer ticket volume, provides an important indicator into the state of the quality of the product and the proficiency of the product development team to both supply new capabilities as well as repair defects.
This report can be adjusted by you, the analyst, at report creation time to focus on different time ranges:
The following parameter settings were used:
A run chart of Customer Ticket Rates (rounded to the day-level)
A run chart of Customer Ticket Volume (rounded to the day-level)
The mean Ticket Closure Rate (TCR) is -0.42. It is represented graphically by the dotted line and the colored region between the total and open tickets in the above chart. The TCR represents the ratio of the rate tickets are being closed vs rate of new tickets arriving. Another way to look at this is if the slope of the Gap is negative, tickets are being closed faster than new tickets are being received.
TCRs >= 0 are good, as they indicate issues are being closed at a rate equal to or greater than the rate of new issues arriving. TCRs of < 0 are a problem as they indicate a potentially run-away situation where issues are growing faster than the ability of the team to address them. Stable user volume alongside increased ticket volume (negative TCR) suggests potential issues in production or testing. High numbers of unresolved issues makes it difficult for the team and management to keep abreast of the status of a project.
Before considering the following recommendations you should make sure that the results reported above make sense in the context of the project, that project personnel are receptive to any changes, and that any recommendations to be implemented will help the project perform measurably better in a way that project personnel care about, project leadership cares about, or the project’s customer(s) care about.
If the project is experiencing an excessive (negative) Ticket Closure Rate then the following recommendations are advised: