Exploring the relations between net benefits of IT projects and CIOs' perception of quality of software development disciplines

August 12, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Business & Information Systems Engineering

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Authors Damjan Vavpotič, Marko Robnik-Šikonja, Tomaž Hovelja arXiv ID 1908.04070 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Cross-listed cs.CY Citations 4 Venue Business & Information Systems Engineering Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Software development enterprises are under consistent pressure to improve their management techniques and development processes. These are comprised of several disciplines like requirements acquisition, design, coding, testing, etc. that must be continuously improved and individually tailored to suit specific software development project. This paper presents an evaluation approach that enables the enterprises to increase development process net benefits by improving disciplines' quality and increasing developers' satisfaction. Our approach builds on Kano's model of quality. Based on an empirical study of top 1000 enterprises from Slovenia we find that application of software development methodologies in individual development disciplines significantly relates to net benefits of IT projects. The results show that different types of Kano quality are present in individual disciplines. Enterprises should be cautious when altering must-be quality disciplines like testing or deployment as they can significantly disrupt the established routines, cause great dissatisfaction between developers and significantly reduce benefits. On the other hand, changing the attractive quality disciplines like requirements acquisition can notably increase developers' satisfaction and benefits but is less likely to disrupt the established routines.
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