Title
Managing Preliminary Requirements Information In Information Technology Projects
Abstract
Information technology (IT) development often suffers from requirements uncertainty as in many cases only preliminary information is available. Wrong decisions may lead to rework that wastes resources and delays the project. Coping with preliminary information is thus an important aspect of project management. The authors apply a case study approach to analyze how IT professionals react to preliminary information and why they do so. The authors base their study on a concurrent engineering research study that provides guidelines how the downstream process (implementation) should react if the upstream process (analysis) is not able to provide all information. According to the authors' results, IT professionals predominantly apply these proposed reactions. Nevertheless, it is often unclear why they react the chosen way. They recommend IT professionals to invest effort to more systematically consider multiple reactions. Future research should focus on how the upstream process should react when the downstream process needs to make a decision.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.4018/ijitpm.2014010106
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Keywords
Field
DocType
Information Technology (IT), Multiple Case Study, Preliminary Information, Project Management, Requirements Engineering
Rework,Concurrent engineering,Information technology,Coping (psychology),Knowledge management,Engineering,Decision-making,Project management
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
5
1
1938-0232
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
20
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Marcus Keutel100.34
Dirk Basten25716.67