Guideline: Important Decisions in Requirements
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Guideline: Important Decisions in Requirements
This guideline describes important things to consider when tailoring the Requirements aspects of the process.
Relationships
Related Elements
Requirements
Requirements
Tailor the Development Process for the Project
Main Description
Decide How to Use Work Products
Make a decision about what work products are to be used and how they are to be used. In addition to
identifying what work products are to be used, it is also important to also tailor each work product to be used to fit
the needs of the project.
The table below specifies which Requirements work products are recommended and which are considered optional (i.e., may
only be used in certain cases). For additional tailoring considerations, see the tailoring section of the work
product description page.
Work Product
Purpose
Tailoring (Optional, Recommended)
Artifact: Use-Case Model (Artifact: Actor, Artifact: Use Case, Artifact: Use-Case Package)
Use cases are used to define functional requirements.
Recommended for most projects.
Use cases are the recommended method for capturing functional requirements.
Artifact: Storyboard
Projects with behavioral requirements that are not really understood should consider Storyboarding as a
means to elicit requirements.
Optional
Other requirements elicitation techniques may be used.
Artifact: Glossary
Ensures that everyone on the project is using a common vocabulary.
Recommended for most projects.
Artifact: Requirements Attributes
A database of requirements attributes helps ensure that requirements are properly prioritized, tracked,
and traced.
Optional
However, on projects with relatively few requirements, a database of requirements attributes may
not be strictly necessary.
Artifact: Requirements Management Plan
Describes the information to be collected and control mechanisms to be used for measuring, reporting,
and controlling changes to the product requirements. A separate document is needed if requirements
management complexity or customer visibility warrants it.
Optional
Projects with relatively few requirements may take a lightweight approach to requirements
management which can be documented directly in the Software Development Plan.
Other projects may select and follow a more rigorous approach, but produce little or no formal
description. For example, the set of requirements attributes to be gathered may be implicitly
documented by the configuration of the tools.
Artifact: Software Requirements Specification
Used to collect the set of all requirements in a formal document provided to the customer.
Optional
On less formal projects, a formal document may not be required.
Artifact: Stakeholder Requests
Captures all requests made on the project, as well as how these requests have been addressed.
Recommended for most projects.
In order to build a system that meets the needs of the stakeholders, it is important to solicit and
review their requests.
Many projects manage Stakeholder Requests as just a category of Change Requests. Other projects may
capture Stakeholder Requests only informally.
Artifact: Supplementary Specifications
Used to capture non-functional requirements.
Recommended for most projects.
Artifact: Vision
Captures very high-level requirements and design constraints, to give the reader an understanding of
the system to be developed.
Recommended for most projects.
Decide Which Reports to Use
The decision of which reports to use will depend on the reporting tools available to the project. If report generation
tools are available, we recommend generating reports for model oriented or database oriented work products, such as
Use-Cases and Actors. Existing reports in your RUP configuration are available from the work product description pages
and grouped under the relevant work product in the treebrowser.
Decide How to Maintain "Input
Requirements"
This section only applies if a formal contract, standard or specification document is imposing requirements to the
requirements management effort. It is referred to as the "input requirements specification".
During the requirements effort, you capture the requirements in these documents: Artifact: Vision, Artifact: Stakeholder Requests, Artifact: Use-Case Model, Artifact: Supplementary Specifications.
Decide whether the input requirements specification will be maintained or not. Will you go back and update the input
requirements specification when you discover a requirement was bad, wrong or faulty? You must also decide how to
maintain traces or references between the input requirement specification and the Artifact: Use Case.
Choose one, or a combination of, the following strategies:
Do not update the input requirement specification. Let the Use Cases and the Supplementary Specification specify
what the system will do hereafter.
Do not update the input requirements specification, but maintain the Traceability
from use cases back to it.
Update the input requirements specification with all work and costs involved.
Let the input requirements specification evolve into a Supplementary Specification containing requirements. The
functional input requirements are simply transferred to the use cases.
Most projects find that the number of requirements which are bad, faulty or wrong is so large, it doesn't make sense to
maintain the original input requirements specification. Very few projects have customers willing to pay for the work of
updating the input requirements specification with the new information revealed during use-case modeling.
Don't stress this topic too early. In the beginning of a project, people still believe in the initial requirements
specification, however, after working through the problem area with a use case, most people have quite a different view
of the initial requirements specification.
Decide How to Approve Use Cases
Decide how to approve the use cases. A lot of time can be saved by limiting the number of use cases that have to be
formally reviewed by the customer. Perhaps it's acceptable for the customer to formally review
only a subset of all use cases.
Choose one or more of the following strategies:
All use cases must pass formal external reviews with representatives who are external to the project.
Some secondary use cases can be approved in a simplified way, at either an informal or an internal formal review.
Secondary use cases are those use cases essential to the system but not to the task of the primary user; for example,
use cases related to the administration and maintenance of the system, such as adding users to the system, changing
their authority, and making backups. The system will not work without these use cases, although they're not of primary
interest to the important users.
The strategy you use depends on your relationship with your customer. Do they trust that you can do the supporting use
cases correctly without a formal approval process? Although this would save a considerable amount of time, will you
reach the right quality of the use-case model?
Note: A solution to the problem may involve the customer in the Requirements effort. By involving customer
representatives, they will be able to approve or give recommendations to other customers, and by involving the
customer, the project gains credibility.
For more information on review levels, see Guideline: Review Levels.
© Copyright IBM Corp. 1987, 2006. All Rights Reserved.
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