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Product Design Analysis

Product Design Analysis. Objectives. To explain the product design process as top-down and user centered To list and explain several needs elicitation heuristics and techniques To describe how to analyze and document needs elicitation results To explain how to check analysis results. Topics.

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Product Design Analysis

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  1. Product Design Analysis

  2. Objectives • To explain the product design process as top-down and user centered • To list and explain several needs elicitation heuristics and techniques • To describe how to analyze and document needs elicitation results • To explain how to check analysis results

  3. Topics • Product design process overview • Needs versus requirements • Needs elicitation challenges, heuristics, and techniques • Documenting domain, goals, and needs • Modeling • Checking needs documentation

  4. Software Product Design Process

  5. Top-Down Process • Design resolution begins with abstract requirements and refines them • Designers move from user-level to operational-level to physical level requirements • Main activity in the resolution loop

  6. User-Centered Process • Stakeholder focus—Determine needs of all stakeholders and include them in evaluation • Empirical evaluation—Collect data about needs, desires, and design quality • Iteration—Improve design repeatedly until adequate

  7. Stakeholder Roles

  8. Needs versus Requirements • Stakeholder needs and desires define the product design problem. • Requirements specify the product design solution. • Needs and requirements statements are similar, but the heart of product design is moving from needs to requirements. • Conflicting needs and desires • Tradeoffs (needs and constraints) • Ways of satisfying needs and desires

  9. Needs Elicitation Challenges 1 • Needs and desires must be understood in the context of the problem domain. • Stakeholders may not be available. • Stakeholder responses are often hard to understand and sort out.

  10. Needs Elicitation Challenges 2 • Stakeholders often cannot explain their work, or articulate their needs and desires. • Stakeholders make mistakes, leave things out, and are misleading. • Stakeholders often don’t understand the capabilities and limitations of technology.

  11. Elicitation Heuristics • Learn about the problem domain first. • Determine stakeholder goals as the context of stakeholder needs and desires. • Study user tasks.

  12. Elicitation Techniques 1 • Interviews—Designers question stakeholders • Most important technique • Many ways to do interviews • Recording responses • Observation—Designers watch users work • Better than having people explain their work • Several of the right people, several times • Talking out loud • Recording observations

  13. Elicitation Techniques 2 • Focus groups—Informal discussion led by a facilitator • Six to nine people • Facilitator keeps people on task • User-level requirements • Elicitation workshops—Directed discussion led by a facilitator • More directed and detailed than a focus group • Specific goals • Needs or desires or product features and details • Requires committed stakeholders

  14. Elicitation Techniques 3 • Document studies • Books (problem domain) • Policies and procedures • Process improvement studies • Development documentation • Problem and bug reports • Suggestions • Competitive product studies • Products themselves • Reviews and market studies

  15. Elicitation Techniques 4 • Prototype demonstrations • A prototype is a working model of part or all of a final product. • Ferret out features and capabilities • Explore user interface ideas • Visionary products • Use several techniques, favoring those that allow direct contact with stakeholders.

  16. Documenting the Problem Domain • Organize notes • Make a problem domain glossary • Make an organization chart • Make UML activity diagrams

  17. Documenting Goals Categories are based on roles, not individuals, jobs, or titles. A stakeholders-goals list is a catalog of important stakeholder categories and their goals.

  18. Documenting Needs and Desires • A need statement should • Name the stakeholder category or categories • State one specific need • Be a positive declarative sentence • Often requires interpretation of raw data A need statement documents a single product feature, function, or property needed or desired by one or more stakeholders.

  19. Organizing Need Statements • Needs lists should be arranged hierarchically • Try arrangements with note cards • Prioritize needs • Numbers • Hi/Med/Lo • Consult stakeholders A needs list catalogs need statements.

  20. Modeling • Many kinds of models can represent the problem and help designers understand it. • Many modeling notations and techniques useful for analysis will be discussed later. • Various UML diagrams • Use case descriptions, user interface diagrams, dialog maps • Conceptual modeling, use case modeling

  21. Checking Needs Documentation 1 • Correctness—A statement is correct if it is contingent and accords with the facts. • Scope—A goal or need is within the project scope if it can be satisfied using the planned features of the product created by the project. • Terminological consistency—Terminological consistency is using words with the same meaning and not using synonyms.

  22. Checking Needs Documentation 2 • Uniformity—A description has uniformity when it treats similar items in similar ways. • Completeness—Documentation is complete when it contains all relevant material. • Review activities • Developers should use checklists • Stakeholders should review documents

  23. Summary 1 • The product design process is essentially top-down and user centered. • Product design begins with design problem analysis. • Stakeholders can play many roles in product design. • Needs define the product design problem; requirements state the solution.

  24. Summary 2 • Designers should understand the problem domain and stakeholder goals before eliciting needs. • Needs can be elicited in many ways and preferably by direct contact with stakeholders. • Many kinds of models can help understand the problem. • Needs must be documented, organized, and checked.

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