Contents contributed and discussions participated by Peter Van der Straaten
The Anatomy of a Successful Team Squad What I Learned from My Recent Experiment with th... - 0 views
(24) BDD - Business Driven Development | LinkedIn - 0 views
Behavior-driven development - Wikipedia - 0 views
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This format is referred to as the Gherkin language, which has a syntax similar to the above example
Great RDF visualization tools - Stack Overflow - 0 views
MIM - Metamodel Informatie Modellering - 0 views
'Goede communicatie begint bij semantiek' | Forum Standaardisatie - 0 views
How We Made Our Customer The Product Owner | by Barry Overeem | The Liberators | Jun, 2... - 0 views
SKOS (Simple Knowledge Organization System) - NORA Online - 1 views
MIM toegepast op de Informatiezuil van de Immigratie- en naturalisatiedienst - NORA Online - 0 views
MIM (Metamodel voor informatiemodellen) - NORA Online - 0 views
Product Owner - Scaled Agile Framework - 0 views
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For most enterprises moving to Agile, this is a new and critical role, typically translating into a full-time job, requiring one PO to support each Agile team (or, at most, two teams). This role has significant relationships and responsibilities outside the local team, including working with Product Management, Customers, Business Owners, and other stakeholders
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Without the right number of people in the right roles, bottlenecks will severely limit velocity.
ICTU presenteert samen met RADIO Toolkit business analyse voor overheidsorganisaties | ... - 0 views
Use Cases for Business Analysts - The New School - 0 views
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In my experience use cases are very powerful tools - their purpose is show the view from a *user's point of view*. The presented example is already very technical, and specifies a lot of details.
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May I offer alternatives to the example in the article?A) A few brief classic requirements (for business) & a diagram (BPMN or UML activity diagram) (for the engineers)B) A use case with a lot less details (maybe 4-8 steps) & user interface design & a list of business rules (describing the essence of the details)C) No use case. One single sentence describing the goal & rationale ("As a user I want to have a recovery method when I forget the password because ....") & brief description of the important parts, business rules (no flow details!) & user interface design
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May I offer other improvements to the "classic" use case in the example?- Instead of a summary, formulate it as a goal (remove redundancy)- Adding how frequently this is done ("Frequency: seldom, max. once per month ... once every few years")- Keep the main flow under 10 points- Remove pre-conditions and post-conditions. Keep it simple.- Integrate the alternative flows into the main flow (if possible, leave away details)
Use cases or business process maps, what technique to use? - 0 views
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shed some light on the difference between process maps and use cases.
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different techniques and basically the result is the same
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if you’re more comfortable with use cases then stick to them or if you’re more familiar with process maps then draw a map