We have witnessed a disconcerting trend. That trend is in consolidating risk reserves for projects into one, centrally managed bucket of money. This bucket was once reserved for the unknown-unknowns and was called a Management Reserve. However, more businesses are beginning to strip projects of their known-unknown Project Risk Reserves and placing calculated project contributions […]
We have recently had a discussion on what it takes to quality assure software. The discussion focused on FMEA and the role it plays in quality assurance. The discussion began to sound as if the FMEA was the panacea for poor quality. There is no silver bullet. To be sure the FMEA (which is essentially […]
We have our requirements, our iterative packages and content defined, and now the developers are producing the iterations. During this time, the verification and test folks have been creating the test cases or details on how we intend to confirm the product performance. Our requirements provide the fodder for our testing. For each requirement there […]
Once we have our captured our requirements. We identify the substance of the content for the iterations from the development. In fact, recall from the requirements prioritization blog post. That work has given us some insight into how the iterative packages could be developed and what content or capabilities are to be delivered. In the […]
One under or ineffectively used tool is the specification or requirements review, which is a form of design review. In this case we are reviewing the design while it is still easy and cheap to make adjustments. Experience suggests, if we do not just forget to do this activity, it is a hastily arranged activity […]
You need not been so technically skilled to be able to see how many project fail due to requirements. We provide a brief list of the failings below: Requirements control Insufficient time Did not include the sponsor or customer Late delivery of requirements Requirements traceability We will not write any more on requirements control that […]
The initial product requirements provide the product baseline. Our project planning will be focused upon delivering meeting these requirements. In a phased development process, we will prioritize the requirements (shown earlier) and deliver iterations. This staged delivery allows us to gain additional insight into the product. We may learn things that necessitate changes to the […]
We now have linked our scope through to the various levels of requirements. We are then able to prioritize the delivery of the various project obligations. The prioritization may be based, for example upon: Technical need Customer need Regulatory requirements Complexity and Risk Technical needs are the dependencies to getting the product features working, for […]
Our configuration management is borne out of our requirements. In our earlier blog post, we discussed how the project scope must be traceable to the requirements. In the case we present below, the project scope is a particular function or need to be met, for example a new feature or function for an automobile. We […]
This may sound difficult, but there are some rules for good requirements. According to the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE http://www.incose.org/chicagoland/docs/Writing%20Effective%20Requirements.pdf), requirements should have the attributes below (similarly can be found at IEEE): Necessary – driven by the objective of the project and business Verifiable – ability to objectively confirmed that the requirement is […]