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Identifying Needs and Establishing Requirements Presenters: Veronica Gasca Jennifer Rhough.
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Transcript of Identifying Needs and Establishing Requirements Presenters: Veronica Gasca Jennifer Rhough.
Identifying Needs and Establishing Requirements
Presenters:Veronica GascaJennifer Rhough
Introduction: The whysUser’s needs, requirements, aspirations, and expectations should be taken into considerationRewards if established correctlyDisadvantages if wrong or not done
RequirementsMake it as clear, specific, and unambiguous as possibleAbstract
Web site should appeal to teenage girlsPrecise
Search time for a query is less than 3 seconds Issue an auditory and visual alert when a
download fails
Types of RequirementsFunctionalData (volatility, size, persistence, accuracy, value)
UserUsabilityEnvironment Physical Social Organizational Technical
Data Gathering Techniques
QuestionnairesInterviewsFocus Groups/Workshops
Naturalistic ObservationStudying Documentation
Technique #1QuestionnairesElicit specific informationNeeds to be written wellGood for large groups of people, spread
geographicallyOften used in conjunction with other
techniques
Technique #2Interviews In-person or phoneStructured or UnstructuredGood at getting people to explore issuesMore enjoyableTime consumingNot good for large groups of people
Technique #3Focus Groups/WorkshopsConsensus viewHighlights conflicts/disagreementsStructured or facilitator mediatedStrong personalities can dominate
discussions
Technique #4Naturalistic ObservationShadow day to day tasksMore accurate, detailed descriptionsVary from outside to participant
observationTime consumingGenerates large amounts of data
Technique #5Studying DocumentationBackground legislationPrevious software
Which one?TimeExperience of analystNature of taskOther resource availabilitystakeholders
Some TipsInvolve all stakeholdersUse combo of techniquesObtain diversity
Props/prototypesRun pilot data gathering sessions
Data Interpretation and Analysis
Interpretation Goal: to structure and record descriptions of requirements.
Start interpretation as soon after the gathering session as possible. Discuss the findings with others.
Requirements template (Volere, Atlantic Systems Guild):
Requirement #: Unique Id Requirement Type: Template sectionEvent/use case #: Origin of the requirement Description: A one-sentence statement of the intention of the
requirement.Rationale: Why is the requirement considered important or necessary?Source: Who raised this requirement?Fit Criterion: A quantification of the requirement used to determine
whether the solution meets the requirement.…
Techniques to understand users’ goals and tasks
Task Description
Task Analysis
ScenariosUse CasesEssential Use Cases
ScenariosScenario: Informal narrative description of human activities or tasks in a story that allows exploration and discussion of contexts, needs, and requirements.
Concentrate on the human activity rather than interaction with technology.
Sample scenarioMary needs to send some documents to her boss, who is currently in France. She scans the documents and places the electronic copies into her working directory and then opens her eMail application to send the information through electronic Mail. She creates a new memo and selects….
Advantages of using scenarios
Scenarios help explain or discuss some aspect of the user’s goals. They can be used to imagine potential users of a device as well as to capture existing behavior.
Capturing scenarios of existing behavior helps in determining new scenarios and hence gathering data for new requirements.
Use casesAlso focus on user goals, but the emphasis here is on a user-system interaction rather than the user’s task itself.
A use case is associated with an actor, and it is the actor’s goal in using the system that the use case wants to capture.
Creating use casesThe main use case describes what is called the “normal course” through the use case To develop a use case: First, identify the actors (people or systems that will
be interacting with the system under development). Examine these actors and identify their goals or
goals in using the system. Each of these will be a use case.
Sample use case1. The user chooses the option to arrange a meeting.2. The system prompts user for the names of attendees.3. The user types in a list of names.4. The system checks that the list is valid.5. The system prompts the user for meeting constraints.6. The user types in meeting constraints.7. …
Alternative course:5. If the list of people is invalid, display an error message and
return to step 2.
Use case diagram
Arrange a meeting
Essential use casesThey represent abstractions from scenarios, and consist of: Name to express overall user intention Stepped description of user actions Stepped description of system responsibility
Instead of actors, essential use cases are associated with user roles.
Sample essential use case
User Intention System responsibilityArrange a meeting
request meeting attendeesIdentify meeting attendeesIdentify meeting constraints
suggest potential dates…
…
Task analysisIt’s used to analyze the underlying rationale and purpose of what people are doing.
The most widely used version is known as HTA (Hierarchical Task Analysis) HTA involves breaking a task down into subtasks and then
Into sub-subtasks And so on….
The starting point is a user goal
Sample task analysis0. In order to arrange a meeting
1. compile a list of meeting attendees2. compile a list of meeting constraints3. find a suitable date
3.1 identify potential dates from departmental calendar3.2 identify potential dates from each individual’s calendar3.3 …
4. enter meeting into calendars…
For more information…Interaction Design (Preece, Rogers, Sharp)Chapter 7, Identifying needs and establishing
requirements.