Usability Quote of the Day

May 23, 2012

There's something very odd going on here. If designers made completely unrealistic assumptions about the physical world when designing technology, then we would blame them (and likely sue them) for technical incompetence. Yet when they make grossly unrealistic assumptions about human nature... we don't blame the designers, we blame the unfortunate people who are just trying to do what the design requires. -- Kim Vicente, The Human Factor, p. 45.    (via interaction-design.org)

Saturday, February 05, 2005

A Taxonomy of Stakeholders

"Systems engineers have often paid too little attention to the nature of the so-called 'users' of products under development. These are better called Stakeholders, as many roles are involved, and few of those are in direct contact with the developed products.

A simple and robust conceptual framework for classifying development stakeholders - a taxonomy - is proposed. The taxonomy is product-centric, with concentric "Circles" denoting broad categories of stakeholder. Within these, generic "Slots" describe typical classes of stakeholder; these are subdivided into "Roles" which are expected to vary at least in name with the domain. Examples are given, and a popular template is reanalysed using the framework.

The taxonomy has immediate value in identifying and validating stakeholder roles in requirements elicitation, helping to ensure that key viewpoints are not missed, and hence reducing the risk of instability and failure during development."

User Interface Display

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

<< Home
.