Mastering the Requirements Process Workshop with James Robertson
Mastering the Requirements Process Workshop
About this workshop:
This three-day workshop is entirely focused on requirements management. Requirements are the most crucial part of systems development, and yet the most misunderstood part of it. Requirements must be correct if the rest of the development effort is to succeed. This workshop presents a complete process for eliciting the real requirements, testing them for correctness, and recording them clearly, comprehensibly and unambiguously.
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Software development today is more complex and demanding than ever; and there are fewer resources to meet those demands. Getting the software right – the first time – is the most effective way to succeed under these circumstances. Today"s requirements process is incremental with quick cycle times. It uses prototypes and scenarios, and it ensures that your developers know precisely what you – and your customer – mean when you write a fit criterion: a concise test case for the requirement.
This workshop shows you how to precisely define the scope of the business problem, to discover and involve the appropriate stakeholders, to use techniques such as apprenticing and use case workshops to learn what the users really need, to write testable requirements, and to phase the requirements to allow incremental delivery of the product.
Why should you attend this workshop ?
During this workshop, you will learn how to:
- Determine your client"s needs – exactly
- Write requirements that are complete, traceable, and testable
- Precisely define the scope of the project
- Discover the stakeholders and keep them involved
- Use up-to-date techniques such as storyboarding and e-collaboration
- Get the requirements quickly, and incrementally
Who should attend this workshop ?
This workshop is particularly useful for anyone who wants to deliver the right systems: the ones that get used.
This includes, but is not restricted to business analysts, systems analysts, project leaders or managers, requirements engineers, consultants or similar. It will also be useful for users or software customers who want to ensure the requirements process delivers what they need.