DocumentCode
1933754
Title
How to assign cost to “avoidable requirements creep”: A step towards the waterfall´s agilization
Author
Pühl, Stefan ; Fahney, Ralf
Author_Institution
Dell GmbH, Frankfurt, Germany
fYear
2011
fDate
Aug. 29 2011-Sept. 2 2011
Firstpage
307
Lastpage
312
Abstract
Scope creep is a major risk in fixed price projects. It has been suggested to distinguish between so-called “avoidable creep” and “unavoidable creep” where “avoidable creep” results from stopping requirements engineering (RE) effort too early e.g. for cost-saving reasons. However, no suggestion has been made how to assign cost to “avoidable creep” to quantify the consequence of too early stopped RE effort and to get that type of creep managed or even considerably reduced. From our experience in real and large fixed price projects, we derived a suggestion for solving this problem as soon as possible. The suggested solution has not yet been tried out in practice. However, with this paper we would like to begin a discussion about the suggested solution, and whether it could solve the problem of valuating “avoidable creep”, could thereby reduce both the customer´s and the supplier´s risk in large fixed price projects and, as a side-effect, serves as a step in converging pure waterfall and pure agile procedures.
Keywords
formal specification; project management; risk management; software prototyping; systems analysis; avoidable requirement creep; customer risk; fixed price projects; requirement engineering; scope creep; supplier risk; waterfall agilization; Complexity theory; Contracts; Creep; Maintenance engineering; Production; Software design; change request; fixed price contract; release management; requirements change; requirements management;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Requirements Engineering Conference (RE), 2011 19th IEEE International
Conference_Location
Trento
ISSN
1090-705X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0921-0
Electronic_ISBN
1090-705X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RE.2011.6051623
Filename
6051623
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