Produktbild: Mastering the Requirements Process

Mastering the Requirements Process Getting Requirements Right

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

06.08.2012

Verlag

Pearson Education

Seitenzahl

576

Maße (L/B/H)

24,9/19,7/3,5 cm

Gewicht

1134 g

Auflage

3rd Revised edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-321-81574-3

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

06.08.2012

Verlag

Pearson Education

Seitenzahl

576

Maße (L/B/H)

24,9/19,7/3,5 cm

Gewicht

1134 g

Auflage

3rd Revised edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-321-81574-3

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Mastering the Requirements Process
  • Preface to the Third Edition xxi

    Foreword to the First Edition xxiii

    Acknowledgments xxv

     

    Chapter 1: Some Fundamental Truths 1

    in which we consider the essential contribution of requirements

    Truth 1 1

    Truth 2 2

    Truth 3 3

    Truth 4 4

    Truth 5 5

    Truth 6 6

    Truth 7 7

    Truth 8 7

    Truth 9 8

    Truth 10 8

    Truth 11 9

    What Are These Requirements Anyway? 9

    The Volere Requirements Process 11

     

    Chapter 2: The Requirements Process 13

    in which we present a process for discovering requirements and discuss how you might use it

    The Requirements Process in Context 14

    A Case Study 15

    Project Blastoff 15

    Trawling for Requirements 17

    Quick and Dirty Modeling 19

    Scenarios 20

    Writing the Requirements 20

    Quality Gateway 22

    Reusing Requirements 23

    Reviewing the Requirements 23

    Iterative and Incremental Processes 24

    Requirements Retrospective 25

    Evolution of Requirements 26

    The Template 27

    The Snow Card 29

    Your Own Requirements Process 31

    Formality Guide 32

    The Rest of This Book 33

     

    Chapter 3: Scoping the Business Problem 35

    in which we establish a definition of the business area to be changed, thereby ensuring that the project team has a clear vision of what their project is meant to achieve

    Project Blastoff 35

    Formality Guide 38

    Setting the Scope 38

    IceBreaker 41

    Scope, Stakeholders, and Goals 43

    Stakeholders 44

    Other Stakeholders 50

    Finding the Stakeholders 54

    Goals: What Do You Want to Achieve? 54

    Constraints 59

    Naming Conventions and Definitions 60

    How Much Is This Going to Cost? 61

    Risks 62

    To Go or Not to Go 63

    Blastoff Meetings 64

    Summary 65

     

    Chapter 4: Business Use Cases 67

    in which we discuss a fail-safe way of partitioning the work and so smooth the way for your requirements investigation

    Understanding the Work 67

    Formality Guide 69

    Use Cases and Their Scope 69

    The Scope of the Work 70

    Business Events 73

    Why Business Events and Business Use Cases Are a Good Idea 75

    Finding the Business Events 78

    Business Use Cases 80

    Business Use Cases and Product Use Cases 82

    Summary 85

     

    Chapter 5: Investigating the Work 87

    in which we come to an understanding of what the business is doing, and start to think about what it might like to do

    Trawling the Business 87

    Formality Guide 89

    Trawl for Knowledge 89

    The Business Analyst 91

    Trawling and Business Use Cases 92

    The Brown Cow Model 93

    The Current Way of Doing Things (How-Now) 94

    Apprenticing 98

    Business Use Case Workshops 99

    Interviewing the Stakeholders 102

    Looking for Reusable Requirements 106

    Quick and Dirty Process Modeling 107

    Prototypes and Sketches 109

    Mind Maps 116

    The Murder Book 119

    Video and Photographs 120

    Wikis, Blogs, Discussion Forums 122

    Document Archeology 123

    Family Therapy 125

    Choosing the Best Trawling Technique 125

    Finally . . . 127

     

    Chapter 6: Scenarios 129

    in which we look at scenarios, and how the business analyst uses them to communicate with the stakeholders

    Formality Guide 129

    Scenarios 130

    The Essence of the Business 135

    Diagramming the Scenario 138

    Alternatives 139

    Exceptions 140

    What if? Scenarios 142

    Misuse Cases and Negative Scenarios 142

    Scenario Template 143

    Summary 145

     

    Chapter 7: Understanding the Real Problem 147

    in which we “think above the line” to find the true essence of the business, and so deliver the right product–one that solves the right problem

    Formality Guide 149

    The Brown Cow Model: Thinking Above the Line 149

    Solving the Right Problem 156

    Moving into the Future 157

    How to Be Innovative 160

    Systemic Thinking 162

    Value 165

    Personas 166

    Challenging Constraints 169

    Innovation Workshops 171

    Brainstorming 173

    Back to the Future 174

     

    Chapter 8: Starting the Solution 177

    in which we bring the essence of the business into the technological world of the implementation

    Iterative Development 179

    Essential Business 179

    Determine the Extent of the Product 180

    Consider the Users 181

    Designing the User Experience 183

    Innovation 184

    Sketching the Interface 188

    The Real Origin of the Business Event 189

    Adjacent Systems and External Technology 190

    Cost, Benefit, and Risks 194

    Document Your Design Decisions 195

    Product Use Case Scenarios 196

    Putting It All Together 199

     

    Chapter 9: Strategies for Today’s Business Analyst 203

    in which we consider strategies for the business analyst to guide requirements discovery in today’s changing environments

    Balancing Knowledge, Activities, and People 204

    Common Project Requirements Profiles 204

    How Much Knowledge Is Needed Before Each Breakout? 205

    External Strategy 206

    Iterative Strategy 210

    Sequential Strategy 212

    Your Own Strategy 215

    Sharpening Your Requirements Skills 215

    Summary 222

     

    Chapter 10: Functional Requirements 223

    in which we look at those requirements that cause the product to do something

    Formality Guide 224

    Functional Requirements 225

    Uncovering the Functional Requirements 225

    Level of Detail or Granularity 228

    Description and Rationale 229

    Data, Your Secret Weapon 231

    Exceptions and Alternatives 233

    Conditional Requirements 234

    Avoiding Ambiguity 234

    Technological Requirements 237

    Grouping Requirements 237

    Alternatives to Functional Requirements 238

    Requirements for COTS 241

    Summary 242

     

    Chapter 11: Non-functional Requirements 245

    in which we look at the requirements that specify how well your product does what it does

    An Introduction to Non-functional Requirements 246

    Formality Guide 246

    Functional Versus Non-functional Requirements 247

    Use Cases and Non-functional Requirements 248

    The Non-functional Requirements Types 249

    Look and Feel Requirements: Type 10 250

    Usability and Humanity Requirements: Type 11 253

    Performance Requirements: Type 12 257

    Operational and Environmental Requirements: Type 13 259

    Maintainability and Support Requirements: Type 14 261

    Security Requirements: Type 15 262

    Cultural Requirements: Type 16 266

    Legal Requirements: Type 17 268

    Finding the Non-functional Requirements 271

    Blogging the Requirements 271

    Don’t Write a Solution 276

    Summary 277

     

    Chapter 12: Fit Criteria and Rationale 279

    in which we show how measuring requirements makes them unambiguous, understandable, communicable, and testable

    Formality Guide 280

    Why Does Fit Need a Criterion? 280

    The Rationale for the Rationale 282

    Deriving Fit Criteria 284

    Scale of Measurement 285

    Fit Criteria for Non-functional Requirements 286

    Fit Criteria for Functional Requirements 295

    Forms of Fit Criteria 296

    Use Cases and Fit Criteria 299

    Fit Criterion for Project Purpose 299

    Fit Criteria for Solution Constraints 300

    Summary 301

     

    Chapter 13: The Quality Gateway 303

    in which we prevent unsuitable requirements from becoming part of the specification

    Formality Guide 304

    Requirements Quality 305

    Using the Quality Gateway 306

    Within Scope? 307

    Testing Completeness 311

    Testing the Fit Criterion 312

    Consistent Terminology 313

    Viable within Constraints? 314

    Requirement or Solution? 316

    Requirement Value 316

    Gold Plating 317

    Requirements Creep 317

    Implementing the Quality Gateway 319

    Summary 321

     

    Chapter 14: Requirements and Iterative Development 323

    in which we look at how to discover and implement requirements in an iterative development environment

    The Need for Iterative Development 323

    An Iterative Requirements Process 324

    Business Value Analysis and Prioritization 327

    How to Write a Good User Story 329

    Iterative Requirements Roles 333

    Summary 335

     

    Chapter 15: Reusing Requirements 337

    in which we look for requirements that have already been written and explore ways to make use of them

    What Is Reusing Requirements? 338

    Sources of Reusable Requirements 341

    Requirements Patterns 342

    A Business Event Pattern 344

    Forming Patterns by Abstracting 346

    Domain Analysis 351

    Summary 351

     

    Chapter 16: Communicating the Requirements 353

    in which we turn the requirements into communicable form

    Formality Guide 353

    Turning Potential Requirements into Written Requirements 354

    Knowledge Versus Specification 354

    The Volere Requirements Specification Template 357

    Discovering Atomic Requirements 359

    Attributes of Atomic Requirements 361

    Assembling the Specification 365

    Automated Requirements Tools 366

    Functional Requirements 367

    Non-functional Requirements 368

    Project Issues 369

    Summary 369

     

    Chapter 17: Requirements Completeness 371

    in which we decide whether our specification is complete, and set the priorities of the requirements

    Formality Guide 372

    Reviewing the Specification 373

    Inspections 373

    Find Missing Requirements 374

    Have All Business Use Cases Been Discovered? 376

    Prioritizing the Requirements 382

    Conflicting Requirements 386

    Ambiguous Specifications 388

    Risk Assessment 388

    Measure the Required Cost 391

    Summary 391

     

    Appendix A: Volere Requirements Specification Template 393

    a guide for writing a rigorous and complete requirements specification

    Contents 393

    Use of This Template 394

    Volere 394

    Requirements Types 395

    Testing Requirements 396

    Atomic Requirements Shell 396

    1. The Purpose of the Project 397

    2. The Stakeholders 400

    3. Mandated Constraints 407

    4. Naming Conventions and Terminology 415

    5. Relevant Facts and Assumptions 416

    6. The Scope of the Work 420

    7. Business Data Model and Data Dictionary 425

    8. The Scope of the Product 429

    9. Functional and Data Requirements 433

    Non-functional Requirements 435

    10. Look and Feel Requirements 435

    11. Usability and Humanity Requirements 437

    12. Performance Requirements 441

    13. Operational and Environmental Requirements 447

    14. Maintainability and Support Requirements 449

    15. Security Requirements 451

    16. Cultural Requirements 454

    17. Legal Requirements 455

    Project Issues 457

    18. Open Issues 457

    19. Off-the-Shelf Solutions 458

    20. New Problems 460

    21. Tasks 462

    22. Migration to the New Product 463

    23. Risks 465

    24. Costs 467

    25. User Documentation and Training 468

    26. Waiting Room 470

    27. Ideas for Solutions 471

     

    Appendix B: Stakeholder Management Templates 473

    Stakeholder Map 473

    Stakeholder Template 475

     

    Appendix C: Function Point Counting: A Simplified Introduction 479

    in which we look at a way to accurately measure the size or functionality of the work area, with a view toward using the measurement to estimate the requirements effort

    Measuring the Work 479

    A Quick Primer on Counting Function Points 481

    Counting Function Points for Business Use Cases 484

    Counting the Stored Data 489

    Adjust for What You Don’t Know 492

    Now That I Have Counted Function Points, What’s Next? 492

     

    Appendix D: Volere Requirements Knowledge Model 495

    Definitions of Requirements Knowledge Classes and Associations 495

     

    Glossary 511

    Bibliography 517

    Index 523