Instead of modeling the entire world, plan by feature and build a list of tangible functionalities to deliver. 3. Invest in "Object-Think" Over Tools
Many teams transition to object technology expecting a "silver bullet" for productivity, only to find themselves trapped in refactoring loops or complex inheritance hierarchies that make the codebase brittle. To survive, you must treat the project not just as a technical challenge, but as a management and cultural shift. Surviving Object-Oriented Projects
Develop in small, testable chunks that result in running code. Instead of modeling the entire world, plan by