Stakeholders of Web Applications Requirements
Keywords:
Stakeholders, Requirements Engineering, Web ApplicationsAbstract
Stakeholders play an important role to establish the requirements of a software system. In fact, systems are built to meet the needs of some stakeholders. They are also source of key requirements; not reaching to all the stakeholders of a system jeopardizes its completeness since the requirements are not detected. In Requirement Engineering, the matter has not been dealt with the required depth and consistency, thus the notion of “stakeholders” remained ambiguous as well as their associated processes. Especially, there is a lack of clear concepts regarding their role in Web applications, a subject that seems controversial (as confirmed by literature). We made ourselves the following question: who are the web application stakeholders and how should we manage them? Our special interest focuses on the local web applications development organizations. For this, we have conducted some field research that covered not only the stakeholder-related aspects, but also other areas of the requirement processes. This field research is a first approach to the problem and provides some answers, but also raises questions and suggests possible answers to some others.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2015 Alejandro Oliveros, Fernando J. Danyans, Matías L. Mastropietro

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Those authors who have publications with this journal, agree with the following terms:
a. Authors will retain its copyright and will ensure the rights of first publication of its work to the journal, which will be at the same time subject to the Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) allowing third parties to share the work as long as the author and the first publication on this journal is indicated.
b. Authors may elect other non-exclusive license agreements of the distribution of the published work (for example: locate it on an institutional telematics file or publish it on an monographic volume) as long as the first publication on this journal is indicated,
c. Authors are allowed and suggested to disseminate its work through the internet (for example: in institutional telematics files or in their website) before and during the submission process, which could produce interesting exchanges and increase the references of the published work. (see The effect of open Access)















