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Requirements Gathering Chapter 5

Requirements Gathering Chapter 5. Alan Dennis, Barbara Wixom, and David Tegarden John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Slides by Fred Niederman Edited by Solomon Negash. Key Ideas.

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Requirements Gathering Chapter 5

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  1. Requirements GatheringChapter 5 Alan Dennis, Barbara Wixom, and David Tegarden John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Slides by Fred Niederman Edited by Solomon Negash

  2. Key Ideas • The goal of the analysis phase is to truly understand the requirements of the new system and develop a system that addresses them. • The first challenge is finding the right people to participate. • The second challenge is collecting and integrating the information • Two techniques for gathering information: • Interviews • JAD sessions

  3. Interviews -- Five Basic Steps • Selecting interviewees • Based on information needed • Often good to get different perspectives: managers, Users, and Ideally, all key stakeholders • Designing interview questions • Unstructured interview: broad, roughly defined information • Structured interview: more specific information • Preparing for the interview • Conducting the interview • Post-interview follow-up

  4. Interview Preparation Steps • Prepare general interview plan • List of question • Anticipated answers and follow-ups • Confirm areas of knowledge • Set priorities in case of time shortage • Prepare the interviewee • Schedule • Inform of reason for interview • Inform of areas of discussion

  5. Conducting the Interview • Appear professional and unbiased • Record all information • Check on organizational policy regarding tape recording • Be sure you understand all issues and terms • Separate facts from opinions • Give interviewee time to ask questions • Be sure to thank the interviewee • End on time

  6. Interview Tips and Follow-up • Tips for conducting the interview • Don’t worry, be happy • Pay attention • Summarize key points • Be succinct • Be honest • Watch body language • Listen • Post-interview follow-up: • Prepare interview notes • Prepare interview report • Look for gaps and new questions

  7. Types of Questions Examples Closed-Ended Questions * How many telephone orders are received per day? * How do customers place orders? * What additional information would you like the new system to provide? Open-Ended Questions * What do you think about the current system? * What are some of the problems you face on a daily basis? * How do you decide what types of marketing campaign to run? Probing Questions * Why? * Can you give me an example? * Can you explain that in a bit more detail? Types of Questions

  8. Questioning Strategies EXAMPLES? TOP DOWN High Level Very General Medium-Level Moderately Specific Low-Level Very Specific BOTTOM UP

  9. Your Turn • You are interviewing the director of information systems for whom you are developing your term project • With your group, write 5 questions you would ask the information director • Take turns having one pair of students posing the questions to another pair of students • Be sure to take notes and write up the results when you have finished.

  10. JAD Key Ideas • JAD advantages • Allows project managers, users, and developers to work together • May reduce scope creep by 50% • Avoids requirements being too specific or too vague • JAD important roles: • Facilitator • Scribe (in-session scribe and minutes scribe) • JAD setting: • U-Shaped seating, Away from distractions • Whiteboard/flip chart, Prototyping tools, and e-JAD

  11. JAD Meeting Room JPEG Figure 5-5 Goes Here

  12. The JAD Session • Tend to last 5 to 10 days over a three week period • Prepare questions as with interviews • Set formal agenda and ground-rules (session norms) • Facilitator activities • Keep session on track • Help with technical terms and jargon • Record group input (use post-it notes with help from the users) • Help resolve issues • Post-session follow-up

  13. Managing Problems in JAD Sessions • Reducing domination • Encouraging non-contributors • Side discussions • Agenda merry-go-round • Violent agreement • Unresolved conflict • True conflict • Use humor

  14. More Analysis Techniques • Document analysis: • Provides clues about existing “as-is” system • Typical documents: forms, reports, and policy manuals • Look for user additions to forms • Look for unused form elements • Observation: • Supplements what users/managers don’t remember, checks validity in a different way, don’t ignore periodic activities: weekly, monthly, annually, etc. • Behaviors change when people are watched • Questionnaires: • Selecting sample participants to represent the population • Select questions carefully when designing the questionnaire • Administering the questionnaire to increase response rate • Questionnaire follow-up, Send results to participants

  15. Interviews JAD Questionnaires Document Observation Analysis Type of As-Is As-Is As-Is As-Is As-Is Information Improve. Improve. Improve. To-Be To-Be Depth of High High Medium Low Low Information Breadth of Low Medium High High Low Information Integration Low High Low Low Low of Info. User Medium High Low Low Low Involvement Cost Medium Low- Low Low Low- Medium Medium Selecting the Appropriate Techniques

  16. Your Term Project • Suggest how your term project should proceed in eliciting requirements. • Consider steps, techniques and goals, who and how. • How would you identify possible improvements? • What possible improvements would you suggest?

  17. Summary • There are five major information gathering techniques that all systems analysts must be able to use: Interviews, JAD, Questionnaires, Document Analysis, and Observation. • Systems analysts must also know how and when to use each as well as how to combine methods. • Additional resources for JAD: • http://www.carolla.com/wp-jad.htm • http://www.utexas.edu/hr/is/pubs/jad.html

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