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Business requirements

Business requirements, also known as stakeholder requirements specifications (StRS), describe the characteristics of a proposed system from the viewpoint of the system's end user like a CONOPS. Products, systems, software, and processes are ways of how to deliver, satisfy, or meet business requirements. Consequently, business requirements are often discussed in the context of developing or procuring software or other systems.

Three main reasons for such discussions:

  1. A common practice is to refer to objectives, or expected benefits, as 'business requirements.' [1]
  2. People commonly use the term 'requirements' to describe the features of the product, system, software expected to be created.
  3. A widely held model claims that these two types of requirements differ only in their level of detail or abstraction — wherein 'business requirements' are high-level, frequently vague, and decompose into the detailed product, system, or software requirements.

To Goldsmith, Robin F, such are confusions that can be avoided by recognizing that business requirements are not objectives, but rather meet objectives (i.e., provide value) when satisfied. Business requirements whats do not decompose into product/system/software requirement hows. Rather, products and their requirements represent a response to business requirements — presumably, how to satisfy what. Business requirements exist within the business environment and must be discovered, whereas product requirements are human-defined (specified). Business requirements are not limited to high-level existence, but need to be driven down to detail. Regardless of their level of detail, however, business requirements are always business deliverable whats that provide value when satisfied; driving them down to detail never turns business requirements into product requirements.[2]

In system or software development projects, business requirements usually require authority from stakeholders. This typically leads to the creation or updating of a product, system, or software. The product/system/software requirements usually consist of both functional requirements and non-functional requirements. Although typically defined in conjunction with the product/system/software functionality (features and usage), non-functional requirements often actually reflect a form of business requirements which are sometimes considered constraints. These could include necessary performance, security, or safety aspects that apply at a business level.

Business requirements are often listed in a Business Requirements Document or BRD. The emphasis in a BRD is on process or activity of accurately accessing planning and development of the requirements, rather than on how to achieve it; this is usually delegated to a Systems Requirements Specification or Document (SRS or SRD), or other variation such as a Functional Specification Document. Confusion can arise between a BRD and a SRD when the distinction between business requirements and system requirements is disregarded. Consequently, many BRDs actually describe requirements of a product, system, or software.

Overview edit

Business requirements in the context of software engineering or the software development life cycle, is the concept of eliciting and documenting business requirements of business users such as customers, employees, and vendors early in the development cycle of a system to guide the design of the future system. Business requirements are often captured by business analysts, who analyze business activities and processes, and often study "as-is" process to define a target "to-be" process.

Business requirements often include

  • Business context, scope, and background, including reasons[3] for change
  • Key business stakeholders that have requirements
  • Success factors for a future/target state
  • Constraints imposed by the business or other systems
  • Business process models and analysis, often using flowchart notations to depict either 'as-is' and 'to-be' business processes
  • Conceptual data models and data dictionary references
  • Glossaries of business terms and local jargon
  • Data flow diagrams to illustrate how data flows through the information systems (different from flowcharts depicting algorithmic flow of business activities)

Business requirements topics edit

Benefits edit

Description
Reduce Project failure Structured explanation of a business process or method defined early in the life cycle helps reduce project failures that occur due to misaligned or misrepresented requirements leading to failure of user expectations.
Connects to broader business goals Well-defined business requirements help lay out a project charter,[3] a critical step in executing business strategy or business goals, and to take it to the next logical step of developing it into an IT system. This helps monitoring overall project health and provides for positive traction with key project stakeholders including sponsors.
Consensus creation and collaboration The benefit of a structured format typical of business requirements documentation helps create positive consensus and better collaboration where the business stakeholder group might be a large cross-functional team, distributed geographically.
Saves costs Good quality of business requirements when captured early on not only improves success of a project but also save overall costs associated with change requests, and related investments in training, infrastructure, etc.

Roles edit

Business requirements are typically defined by business analysts in collaboration with other project stakeholders.

Both parties may be responsible for determining the business requirements and developing technical solutions. Business analysts tend to be involved in developing the implementation approach, and managing the impact on all business areas, including stakeholder engagement and risk management.

Format edit

Traditional BRD Structure - [4]
  • Title
  • Version
  • Description of Change
  • Author
  • Date
  • Contents
    1. Introduction
      1. Purpose
      2. Scope
      3. Background
      4. References
      5. Assumptions and constraints
      6. Document overview
    2. Methodology
    3. Functional requirements
      1. Context
      2. User requirements
      3. Data flow diagrams
      4. Logical data model / data dictionary
    4. Other requirements
      1. Interface requirements
      2. Data conversion requirements
      3. Hardware/Software Requirements
      4. Operational requirements
  • Appendix A -
The most popular format for recording business requirements is the business requirements document (BRD). The intent behind the BRD is to define what results would be wanted from a system, however it might eventually be designed. Hence, BRD documents are complemented with a systems reference document (SRD) OR Technical Design Document (TDD) that details the design, technology performance and infrastructure expectations, including any technology requirements (non-functional) pertaining to quality of service, such as performance, maintainability, adaptability, reliability, availability, security, and scalability.

Completeness edit

Prototyping with early stage testing can assess the completeness and accuracy of captured business requirements. Stakeholders come in early to help define the requirements, and the result is sent to the project development teams who build the business system; other stakeholders test and evaluate the final deployed system. Clarity requires keeping track of the requirements and their solution, with a formal process for determining the appropriate template use. Business requirements scope is not necessarily limited to the stage of defining what needs to be built as a business system. It goes beyond, to envisage how a running business system is managed and maintained, and to ensure its maintained alignment with business goals or strategy. A business requirements document needs to be constantly revised in a controlled fashion. Having a standardized format, or templates that are designed for specific business functions and domains, can ensure completeness of business requirements, besides keeping the scope in focus.

Although commonly considered a means of evaluating requirements, prototyping actually usually shifts attention from business requirements to the product, system, or software being built. Prototypes are working software, which means they are three steps (product/system/software requirements, engineering/technical design of said product/system/software, and implementation of the design in program code) removed from business requirements. Prototypes are preliminary versions of the software the developer intends to implement. Because prototypes are fairly concrete, stakeholders who try out the prototype can give more meaningful feedback regarding some aspects of what the developer is creating, which is the developer's interpretation of a way to satisfy business requirements, not the business requirements. Moreover, in order to create a prototype early and quickly, the Graphical User Interface (GUI) is emphasized and the "guts" are shortcut. The guts are the bulk of the program logic, and are where most business requirements would be addressed. In other words, issues that prototypes reveal are very unlikely to involve business requirements.

It is important to recognize the changes to requirements, document them, and keep the definition of requirements up-to-date. However, business requirements tend not to change nearly so much as the awareness of them. A business requirement may be present, but not recognized or understood by the stakeholders, analysts, and project team. Change is more apparent in regard to what is usually referred to as "requirements changes" - the product/system/software requirements. These tend to reflect the presumed ways of satisfying inadequately identified business requirements. Much of the difficulties attributed to achieving business requirements in fact reflect the common practice of devoting almost all "requirements" effort to what is actually high-level design of a product, system, or software. This stems from failing to first adequately define the business requirements the product/system/software must satisfy in order to provide value. Development practices commonly keep revising the product/system/software until they eventually "back into" a solution that seems to do what is needed, i.e., apparently addresses a business requirement. Such costly trial-and-error indirect ways of identifying business requirements are the basis for much of "iterative development," including popular Agile development methods, that are touted as "best practices."

Templates help prompt inquiry regarding particular topics that often may be relevant to business requirements. They can foster standardized documentation regarding business requirements, which can facilitate understanding. Templates do not ensure accuracy or completeness of business requirements. In fact, commonly misused, templates often negatively impact requirement research, since they tend to promote superficiality and mainly mechanical definition without meaningful analysis.

Difficulties edit

Business requirements are often prematurely hardened due to the large stakeholder base involved in defining the requirements, where there is a potential for conflict in interests. The process of managing and building consensus can be delicate and even political by nature. A lesser challenge, though common, is that of distributed teams with stakeholders in multiple geographical locations. It is natural that sales staff is closer to their customers, while production staff is closer to manufacturing units; finance and HR, including senior management are closer to the registered headquarters. A system for example that involves sales and production users may see conflict of purpose – one side may be interested in offering maximum features, while the other may focus on lowest cost of production. These sorts of situations often end in a consensus with maximum features for a reasonable, profitable cost of production and distribution.

To address these challenges, early stage stakeholder buy-in is achieved through demonstration of prototypes and joint working. Stakeholder workshops are common, either as facilitated sessions or simple huddled discussions, to aid in achieving consensus, especially for sensitive business requirements and where there is potential conflict of interest. Complexity of a business process is a factor. This may entail specialized knowledge required to comprehend legal or regulatory requirements, internal company-wide guidelines such as branding or corporate commitments to social responsibility. Business requirements analysis is not just about capturing the "what" of a business process along with "how" to provide its context. Translation into designing and building a working system may need to be addressed. At this stage, business requirements have to acknowledge technical details and feasibility.

A custom-built solution in not always required for every new set of business requirements. There are often standardized processes and products, which with some tweaking or customization, can serve to address the business requirements. The target business system is frequently constrained by a specific technology choice, budget, or available products already deployed.

Finally, standardization of format may cause difficulties. Multiple projects with multiple formats that lead to variation in structure and content of a requirements document renders these ineffective from a traceability and manageability perspective. In fact, when creating a template for use in a cross-functional requirement gathering exercise, different roles with complementary knowledge may find it difficult to work within a common format. It is therefore crucial to allow non-specialist or non-expert stakeholders to provide additional requirements by Appendices and additional attachments to cover their area of specification. Addressing various nuances, and arriving at a best fit, remains the single biggest challenge to effective requirements.

Identifying business needs edit

Includes the following steps:

  1. Business definition
  2. Understand business domain(s)
  3. Organization goals
  4. Core competence

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Beal, 2012. page 1
  2. ^ Goldsmith, 2004. pages 2-6
  3. ^ a b Project Management Institute 2021, §3.4 Focus on Value.
  4. ^ "BRD template to document functional customer requirements".

References edit

  • Beal, Adriana. Requirement is what we have to do to achieve an objective , 2012
  • Goldsmith, Robin F. Discovering Real Business Requirements for Software Project Success. Artech House, 2004.
  • Project Management Institute (2021). A guide to the project management body of knowledge (PMBOK guide). Project Management Institute (7th ed.). Newtown Square, PA. ISBN 978-1-62825-664-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Robertson, Suzanne and James C. Robertson. Mastering the Requirements Process. 2nd Edition, Addison-Wesley, 2006.

business, requirements, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, feb. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Business requirements news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Business requirements also known as stakeholder requirements specifications StRS describe the characteristics of a proposed system from the viewpoint of the system s end user like a CONOPS Products systems software and processes are ways of how to deliver satisfy or meet business requirements Consequently business requirements are often discussed in the context of developing or procuring software or other systems Three main reasons for such discussions A common practice is to refer to objectives or expected benefits as business requirements 1 People commonly use the term requirements to describe the features of the product system software expected to be created A widely held model claims that these two types of requirements differ only in their level of detail or abstraction wherein business requirements are high level frequently vague and decompose into the detailed product system or software requirements To Goldsmith Robin F such are confusions that can be avoided by recognizing that business requirements are not objectives but rather meet objectives i e provide value when satisfied Business requirements whats do not decompose into product system software requirement hows Rather products and their requirements represent a response to business requirements presumably how to satisfy what Business requirements exist within the business environment and must be discovered whereas product requirements are human defined specified Business requirements are not limited to high level existence but need to be driven down to detail Regardless of their level of detail however business requirements are always business deliverable whats that provide value when satisfied driving them down to detail never turns business requirements into product requirements 2 In system or software development projects business requirements usually require authority from stakeholders This typically leads to the creation or updating of a product system or software The product system software requirements usually consist of both functional requirements and non functional requirements Although typically defined in conjunction with the product system software functionality features and usage non functional requirements often actually reflect a form of business requirements which are sometimes considered constraints These could include necessary performance security or safety aspects that apply at a business level Business requirements are often listed in a Business Requirements Document or BRD The emphasis in a BRD is on process or activity of accurately accessing planning and development of the requirements rather than on how to achieve it this is usually delegated to a Systems Requirements Specification or Document SRS or SRD or other variation such as a Functional Specification Document Confusion can arise between a BRD and a SRD when the distinction between business requirements and system requirements is disregarded Consequently many BRDs actually describe requirements of a product system or software Contents 1 Overview 2 Business requirements topics 2 1 Benefits 2 2 Roles 2 3 Format 2 4 Completeness 3 Difficulties 4 Identifying business needs 5 See also 6 Citations 7 ReferencesOverview editBusiness requirements in the context of software engineering or the software development life cycle is the concept of eliciting and documenting business requirements of business users such as customers employees and vendors early in the development cycle of a system to guide the design of the future system Business requirements are often captured by business analysts who analyze business activities and processes and often study as is process to define a target to be process Business requirements often include Business context scope and background including reasons 3 for change Key business stakeholders that have requirements Success factors for a future target state Constraints imposed by the business or other systems Business process models and analysis often using flowchart notations to depict either as is and to be business processes Conceptual data models and data dictionary references Glossaries of business terms and local jargon Data flow diagrams to illustrate how data flows through the information systems different from flowcharts depicting algorithmic flow of business activities Business requirements topics editBenefits edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Description Reduce Project failure Structured explanation of a business process or method defined early in the life cycle helps reduce project failures that occur due to misaligned or misrepresented requirements leading to failure of user expectations Connects to broader business goals Well defined business requirements help lay out a project charter 3 a critical step in executing business strategy or business goals and to take it to the next logical step of developing it into an IT system This helps monitoring overall project health and provides for positive traction with key project stakeholders including sponsors Consensus creation and collaboration The benefit of a structured format typical of business requirements documentation helps create positive consensus and better collaboration where the business stakeholder group might be a large cross functional team distributed geographically Saves costs Good quality of business requirements when captured early on not only improves success of a project but also save overall costs associated with change requests and related investments in training infrastructure etc Roles edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Business requirements are typically defined by business analysts in collaboration with other project stakeholders Both parties may be responsible for determining the business requirements and developing technical solutions Business analysts tend to be involved in developing the implementation approach and managing the impact on all business areas including stakeholder engagement and risk management Format edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Traditional BRD Structure 4 Title Version Description of Change Author Date Contents Introduction Purpose Scope Background References Assumptions and constraints Document overview Methodology Functional requirements Context User requirements Data flow diagrams Logical data model data dictionary Other requirements Interface requirements Data conversion requirements Hardware Software Requirements Operational requirements Appendix A The most popular format for recording business requirements is the business requirements document BRD The intent behind the BRD is to define what results would be wanted from a system however it might eventually be designed Hence BRD documents are complemented with a systems reference document SRD OR Technical Design Document TDD that details the design technology performance and infrastructure expectations including any technology requirements non functional pertaining to quality of service such as performance maintainability adaptability reliability availability security and scalability Completeness edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Prototyping with early stage testing can assess the completeness and accuracy of captured business requirements Stakeholders come in early to help define the requirements and the result is sent to the project development teams who build the business system other stakeholders test and evaluate the final deployed system Clarity requires keeping track of the requirements and their solution with a formal process for determining the appropriate template use Business requirements scope is not necessarily limited to the stage of defining what needs to be built as a business system It goes beyond to envisage how a running business system is managed and maintained and to ensure its maintained alignment with business goals or strategy A business requirements document needs to be constantly revised in a controlled fashion Having a standardized format or templates that are designed for specific business functions and domains can ensure completeness of business requirements besides keeping the scope in focus Although commonly considered a means of evaluating requirements prototyping actually usually shifts attention from business requirements to the product system or software being built Prototypes are working software which means they are three steps product system software requirements engineering technical design of said product system software and implementation of the design in program code removed from business requirements Prototypes are preliminary versions of the software the developer intends to implement Because prototypes are fairly concrete stakeholders who try out the prototype can give more meaningful feedback regarding some aspects of what the developer is creating which is the developer s interpretation of a way to satisfy business requirements not the business requirements Moreover in order to create a prototype early and quickly the Graphical User Interface GUI is emphasized and the guts are shortcut The guts are the bulk of the program logic and are where most business requirements would be addressed In other words issues that prototypes reveal are very unlikely to involve business requirements It is important to recognize the changes to requirements document them and keep the definition of requirements up to date However business requirements tend not to change nearly so much as the awareness of them A business requirement may be present but not recognized or understood by the stakeholders analysts and project team Change is more apparent in regard to what is usually referred to as requirements changes the product system software requirements These tend to reflect the presumed ways of satisfying inadequately identified business requirements Much of the difficulties attributed to achieving business requirements in fact reflect the common practice of devoting almost all requirements effort to what is actually high level design of a product system or software This stems from failing to first adequately define the business requirements the product system software must satisfy in order to provide value Development practices commonly keep revising the product system software until they eventually back into a solution that seems to do what is needed i e apparently addresses a business requirement Such costly trial and error indirect ways of identifying business requirements are the basis for much of iterative development including popular Agile development methods that are touted as best practices Templates help prompt inquiry regarding particular topics that often may be relevant to business requirements They can foster standardized documentation regarding business requirements which can facilitate understanding Templates do not ensure accuracy or completeness of business requirements In fact commonly misused templates often negatively impact requirement research since they tend to promote superficiality and mainly mechanical definition without meaningful analysis Difficulties editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Business requirements are often prematurely hardened due to the large stakeholder base involved in defining the requirements where there is a potential for conflict in interests The process of managing and building consensus can be delicate and even political by nature A lesser challenge though common is that of distributed teams with stakeholders in multiple geographical locations It is natural that sales staff is closer to their customers while production staff is closer to manufacturing units finance and HR including senior management are closer to the registered headquarters A system for example that involves sales and production users may see conflict of purpose one side may be interested in offering maximum features while the other may focus on lowest cost of production These sorts of situations often end in a consensus with maximum features for a reasonable profitable cost of production and distribution To address these challenges early stage stakeholder buy in is achieved through demonstration of prototypes and joint working Stakeholder workshops are common either as facilitated sessions or simple huddled discussions to aid in achieving consensus especially for sensitive business requirements and where there is potential conflict of interest Complexity of a business process is a factor This may entail specialized knowledge required to comprehend legal or regulatory requirements internal company wide guidelines such as branding or corporate commitments to social responsibility Business requirements analysis is not just about capturing the what of a business process along with how to provide its context Translation into designing and building a working system may need to be addressed At this stage business requirements have to acknowledge technical details and feasibility A custom built solution in not always required for every new set of business requirements There are often standardized processes and products which with some tweaking or customization can serve to address the business requirements The target business system is frequently constrained by a specific technology choice budget or available products already deployed Finally standardization of format may cause difficulties Multiple projects with multiple formats that lead to variation in structure and content of a requirements document renders these ineffective from a traceability and manageability perspective In fact when creating a template for use in a cross functional requirement gathering exercise different roles with complementary knowledge may find it difficult to work within a common format It is therefore crucial to allow non specialist or non expert stakeholders to provide additional requirements by Appendices and additional attachments to cover their area of specification Addressing various nuances and arriving at a best fit remains the single biggest challenge to effective requirements Identifying business needs editIncludes the following steps Business definition Understand business domain s Organization goals Core competenceSee also editSystems Development Life Cycle Systems engineering Software development process Business analyst Software Requirements Specification Requirements analysis Requirement Prototyping Software prototyping Business analysisCitations edit Beal 2012 page 1 Goldsmith 2004 pages 2 6 a b Project Management Institute 2021 3 4 Focus on Value BRD template to document functional customer requirements References editBeal Adriana Requirement is what we have to do to achieve an objective www bealprojects com 2012 Goldsmith Robin F Discovering Real Business Requirements for Software Project Success Artech House 2004 Project Management Institute 2021 A guide to the project management body of knowledge PMBOK guide Project Management Institute 7th ed Newtown Square PA ISBN 978 1 62825 664 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Robertson Suzanne and James C Robertson Mastering the Requirements Process 2nd Edition Addison Wesley 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Business requirements amp oldid 1163540537, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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