Agility - Requirements Management Christopher de Kok IBM Rational IT Specialist
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Agility - Requirements Management Christopher de Kok IBM Rational IT Specialist
Agility - Requirements Management Christopher de Kok IBM Rational IT Specialist References: The premiere software and product delivery event. June 6–10 Orlando, Florida Yan Zhuo - RDM-1196 Bill Shaw & George DeCandio - RDM-2302 Mia McCroskey - RDM-1206A Objectives Requirements in the context of an Agility@Scale approach Requirements Definition and Management Roadmap Requirements Agility Case Study Video - Mia McCroskey - Emerging Health Information Technology 2 2 Agile Process Maturity Model 3 Disciplined Agile Delivery 2 1 Core Agile Development Focus is on construction Goal is to develop a high-quality system in an evolutionary, collaborative, and selforganizing manner Value-driven lifecycle with regular production of working software Agility at Scale Addresses one or more scaling factors: Team size Extends agile development to address full system lifecycle Geographical distribution Risk and value-driven lifecycle Regulatory compliance Self organization within an appropriate governance framework 3 Organizational distribution Environmental complexity Enterprise discipline 4 What is Agility at Scale? 3 Compliance requirement Team size 100’s of developers Under 10 developers Geographical distribution Co-located Global Disciplined Agile Delivery Critical, Audited Organization distribution (outsourcing, partnerships) Third party In-house Enterprise discipline Application complexity Simple, single platform Low risk Complex, multi-platform Project focus 4 Enterprise focus From use case to user story A use case is… A user story is… the specification of a set of actions a simple, clear, brief description performed by a system, expressing a user’s goal for using the system under development which yields an observable result that is, typically, of value for one or more actors or other stakeholders of the system. (Unified Modeling Language - UML 2.0) to deliver business value Both methods are focusing on users and values to the users Each has its own challenges Choose use cases for green-field development and user stories for incremental releases 5 User story: Ron Jeffrey’s 3 Cs Card What is the goal of a user As a (user role), I want to (goal) so I can (reason) Example: As a registered student, I want to view course details so I can create my schedule Conversation How to achieve the goal using the system? Discuss the card with a stakeholder. Just in time analysis (JIT) through conversations. Example: What information is needed to search for a course? What information is displayed? Confirmation How to verify if the story is done and complete, and the goal is achieved Record what you learn in an acceptance test. Example: Student can access course catalog 24 x 7 hours Student cannot choose more than three courses 6 6 INVEST in good stories Independent Negotiable Valuable 7 Right-size user stories Estimateable Small Capture constraints as part of user stories Testable Write closed stories Include user roles in the stories 7 User stories and iterative planning Write initial stories, estimate high-priority stories, and develop high-level release plan at beginning of project Each iteration, pull one iteration’s worth of work off the stack based on your velocity Source: www.ambysoft.com/essays/agileLifecycle.html 8 Agile requirements project template The agile requirements project template includes a set of folders and a document template to elaborate a user story Project Folder: Stakeholder Needs Features Glossary 9 Non-functional Requirements User Story Elaboration Document Template: User Story Elaboration Use the template to create a new Requirements Composer project Customize the template based on your project needs 9 Potentials artifacts for the Stakeholder Needs folder Potential artifacts at the product and program level: Business goals Product vision Product roadmap and strategy Business processes (asis vs. to-be) 10 10 Potential artifacts for the Features folder Potential artifacts: Market analysis and release themes Features and benefits for a product release 11 11 Potential artifacts for the Glossary folder Potential artifacts: Glossary and Terms 12 12 Potential artifacts for the Non-functional Requirements folder Potential artifacts: System-wide nonfunctional requirements 13 13 Potential artifacts for the User Story Elaborations folder Potential artifacts: Flow diagrams for scenarios 14 A scenario can involve multiple user stories Roles and personas User story elaboration UI sketches Storyboards 14 User story elaboration - example A user story may start as a short statement, explaining the intent of the user It can be elaborated through conversations and confirmation, leveraging techniques such as user interface sketches, and storyboarding 15 15 Strategy of describing and managing epics Process sketch or storyboard can visually describe an epic Break down an epic into user stories to elaborate the details Use a collection to manage a group of related user stories 16 16 Analyzing elaborated stories using attributes, tags, and filters Display all elaborated user stories with their attribute values Filter and display elaborated story based on attribute values By Business Priority By Origin By Product Owner By Role Organize elaborated stories by themes Display elaborated stories in a collection 17 17 Objectives Requirements in the context of an Agility@Scale approach Requirements Definition and Management Roadmap Requirements Agility Case Study Video - Mia McCroskey - Emerging Health Information Technology 1 8 18 DISCLAIMER Plans are based on best information available and may change in future © Copyright IBM Corporation 2010. All rights reserved. These materials are intended solely to outline our general product direction and should not be relied on in making a purchasing decision. Information pertaining to new product is for informational purposes only, is not a commitment, promise, or legal obligation to deliver any material, code or functionality, and may not be incorporated into any contract. The development, release, and timing of any features or functionality described for our products remains at our sole discretion. Nothing contained in these materials is intended to, nor shall have the effect of, creating any warranties or representations from IBM or its suppliers or licensors, or altering the terms and conditions of the applicable license agreement governing the use of IBM products. IBM, the IBM logo, Rational, the Rational logo, Telelogic, the Telelogic logo, and other IBM products and services are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation, in the United States, other countries or both. Other company, product, or service names may be trademarks or service marks of others. Rational RM portfolio today Addressing different cultures and different needs Group Associated Offerings Engineering & Compliance cultures DOORS & DOORS Web Access Good outcomes are the result of good, controlled processes. “Have we missed anything?” RequisitePro Market-driven culture Balance process and expedience. “How can we get this out faster with good quality?” Requirements Composer ALM minimalist culture Team Concert and Quality Manager “We use our main tools for requirements too” Ad-hoc culture “We don’t do RM” “What is RM?” 50% of project failure can be tracked to poor requirements practices The Rational RM Strategy Deliver market-leading RM tools and practices Relevant for all types of RM cultures, including engineering / compliance and market-driven Foster an RM ecosystem Enable partners and customers to provide value-add capabilities on the requirements platform Do all this using Innovate while protecting customer investments Deliver next-gen capabilities in a common product family Enable adoption by supporting backward compatibility and providing smooth migration paths services and philosophy Jazz is a platform for transforming software and systems delivery Service-oriented tools with loosely-coupled integrations making mashups and cross-product workflows more productive and flexible than ever Jazz provides a foundation for the development Lifecycle 21 Recent Steps to Implement our RM Strategy 2008 2009 Acquired Telelogic and DOORS Market leader in RM 2010 DOORS 9.2 / DWA 1.3 Requirements Interchange Format (RIF) DOORS Web Access Edit Rational Quality Manager integration IBM-ized DOORS, Chinese/Japanese NLS Requirements Composer 1.0 Collaborative req. definition Visual and textual notations Foundation for future offerings RequisitePro 7.1.1 Package level security ReqWeb improvements Requirements Composer 2.0 Collections, snapshots, reviews Performance, Usability Common reporting components Reviewer Web client Collaborative ALM with RTC/RQM RequisitePro “getting info out” Rational Publishing Engine for docs Rational Insight for dashboards Recent Improvements in RM Integrations 2009 2010 2011+ DOORS 9.2 Rational Quality Manager v2.0 RRC v2.0 Rational Insight using RIF exports HP QualityCenter v10 RRC 2.0 DOORS 9.2 RequisitePro Rational Software Modeller Rational Software Architect CALM 2009 (with RTC/RQM) 23 Today’s High-level Architecture RRC RequisitePro ReqPro Rich ReqPro DOORS RRC Web RRC Rich DOORS Rich DWA Web RRS (Requirements Server) ReqWeb Server COTS database JFS COTS database Interop server DOORS-D Three separate products Three separate repositories Six requirement clients Significant overlap 24 Vision: Proposed Long Term Architecture Group Enterprise Engineering & Compliance cultures Requirements Composer Extensions DOORS Requirements Professional DOORS Web Access Good outcomes are the result of good, controlled processes. “Have we missed anything?” DOORS Enterprise Market-driven culture Requirements Professional Balance process and expedience. “How can we get this out faster with good quality?” DOORS Composer ALM minimalist culture Web Client “We use our main tools for requirements too” Rich Client Team Concert Quality Manager RM Resources Jazz Foundation Server Future IBM Capabilities Your existing capabilities Business Planning & Alignment Product & Project Management Collaborative Lifecycle Management Compliance & Security Engineering & Software Tools 3rd-Party Jazz Capabilities Best Practice Processes Collaboration Presentation: Mashups Discovery Query COTS database Single product line Single server Single Web client Interoperability Storage Administration: Users, projects, process OSLC Integration Strategy – Producing generic integrations DOORS 9.x ClearQuest, RTC, Change RQM Consume Consume Publish Open Services for Lifecycle Collaboration Architecture Management Services Publishing Services Publish Quality Management Services Consume Publish Change Management Services Consume Requirements Management Services ClearQuest, RTC, Change RQM, Insight, RPE DOORS Enterprise DOORS Requirements Professional 2010 Enhancements: DOORS and DOORS Web Access 2009 2010 2011+ “Integrated with Jazz” DOORS 9.x RTC, ClearQuest, Change integrations using OSLC-RM and OSLC-CM Embedded document generation with common reporting components Additional translations: German, French, and Russian SSL communication with certificate based authentication (CAC/PKI) DOORS Web Access 1.x Enhanced filtering for improved analysis/review OSLC integration point for server side integration UI harmonization with IBM Rational Jazz clients “DOORS on Jazz” Tech Preview Common Jazz based requirement server COTS database “Built on Jazz” 27 2011 Enhancements: DOORS Requirements Professional and Requirements Composer 2009 2010 DOORS Requirements Professional Web based/Zero footprint Next-generation RequisitePro RM and Business Analyst solution for market driven cultures Requirements, traceability, schema, and analysis Common Jazz based requirement server 2011+ First direct migration target for RequisitePro users Requirements Composer (RRC) Improved performance and usability 28 2011 Enhancements: DOORS Enterprise 2009 2010 2011+ DOORS Enterprise “Built on Hosting DOORS server on Jazz Jazz” Commercial database support Performance, resilience, and availability focus Requirements interoperability with other Jazz products Requirements sharing with RTC, RQM, RSA, etc. Shared components between RM products Project level attribute/types management Dashboard viewlets Jazz collaboration Requirements workflow Common reporting components 29 2011 Enhancements: DOORS Requirements Professional, Requirements Composer, and DOORS Web Access 2009 2010 2011+ DOORS Requirements Professional Security model and Administration Marquee capabilities (e.g. graphical traceability) Requirements Workflow Requirements Composer (RRC) Provide RRC capabilities on DOORS RP Web based/Plug-ins DOORS Web Access Provided through DOORS RP Common Web technology for requirements access 30 Objectives Requirements in the context of an Agility@Scale approach Requirements Definition and Management Roadmap Requirements Agility Case Study Video - Mia McCroskey - Emerging Health Information Technology 3 1 Customer Video Place Holder 33 www.ibm/software/rational © Copyright IBM Corporation 2010. All rights reserved. The information contained in these materials is provided for informational purposes only, and is provided AS IS without warranty of any kind, express or implied. IBM shall not be responsible for any damages arising out of the use of, or otherwise related to, these materials. Nothing contained in these materials is intended to, nor shall have the effect of, creating any warranties or representations from IBM or its suppliers or licensors, or altering the terms and conditions of the applicable license agreement governing the use of IBM software. References in these materials to IBM products, programs, or services do not imply that they will be available in all countries in which IBM operates. Product release dates and/or capabilities referenced in these materials may change at any time at IBM’s sole discretion based on market opportunities or other factors, and are not intended to be a commitment to future product or feature availability in any way. IBM, the IBM logo, Rational, the Rational logo, Telelogic, the Telelogic logo, and other IBM products and services are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation, in the United States, other countries or both. Other company, product, or service names may be trademarks or service marks of others. 34