Title :
Building a National E-Service using Sentire experience report on the use of Sentire: A volere-based requirements framework driven by calibrated personas and simulated user feedback
Author :
Porter, C. ; Letier, Emmanuel ; Sasse, M. Angela
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. Coll. London, London, UK
Abstract :
User experience (UX) is difficult to quantify and thus more challenging to require and guarantee. It is also difficult to gauge the potential impact on users´ lived experience, especially at the earlier stages of the development life cycle, particularly before hi fidelity prototypes are developed. We believe that the enrolment process is a major hurdle for e-government service adoption and badly designed processes might result in negative repercussions for both the policy maker and the different user groups involved; non-adoption and resentment are two risks that may result in low return on investment (ROI), lost political goodwill and ultimately a negative lived experience for citizens. Identity assurance requirements need to balance out the real value of the assets being secured (risk) with the user groups´ acceptance thresholds (based on a continuous cost-benefit exercise factoring in cognitive and physical workload). Sentire is a persona-centric requirements framework built on and extending the Volere requirements process with UX-analytics, reusable user behavioural models and simulated user feedback through calibrated personas. In this paper we present a story on how Sentire was adopted in the development of a national public-facing e-service. Daily journaling was used throughout the project and a custom built cloud-based CASE tool was used to manage the whole process. This paper outlines our experiences and lessons learnt.
Keywords :
cloud computing; cost-benefit analysis; government data processing; ROI; Sentire experience report; UX-analytics; calibrated personas; cloud-based CASE tool; continuous cost-benefit exercise factoring; development life cycle; e-government service adoption; identity assurance requirements; low return on investment; national public e-service; negative lived experience; persona-centric requirement framework; reusable user behavioural models; simulated user feedback; user group acceptance thresholds; user lived experience; volere-based requirement framework; Calibration; Computer aided software engineering; Educational institutions; Electronic government; Predictive models; Usability; Personas; Requirements engineering for user experience; Sentire; Volere; enrolment process; industry and research collaboration; usability;
Conference_Titel :
Requirements Engineering Conference (RE), 2014 IEEE 22nd International
Conference_Location :
Karlskrona
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3031-9
DOI :
10.1109/RE.2014.6912288