a) It's a great thing about product businesses (and a bit less true of service businesses, and very less true of jobs) that you can cheerfully decline requests. b) It is probably better to phrase this as "No." or "That may be available eventually but it will not hit that date."https://twitter.com/sehurlburt/status/1037192349649174528 …
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When you tell a customer you are slipping a date, they will not interpret it like the last 47 times it happened when Bob got sick, QA underestimated cycle time, or Jane got blocked by being matrixed to the incident response.
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And will they say "Oh, don't worry, I had avoided doing any work on the basis of your forecast dates, so this is ultimately no skin off my nose?" Nope. Nobody likes to admit that they took no action on what might resemble a relevant factoid. They *thought* about it, clearly.
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They thought about it, and then they wrote a schedule, and their thinking about it informed the schedule, and the schedule is now wrong, like every schedule which has ever been written but (importantly) distinguished because none of those other schedules clearly blamed you.
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