Open Access
CRITERIA FOR ACCEPTING SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS NEGOTIATION TOOLS IN THE SOFTWARE INDUSTRY
Author(s) -
Shamsu Abdullahi,
Abubakar Zakari,
Amiura,
Abdulfatah Samaila Mashasha,
Haruna Abdu,
Salisu Suleiman
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science proceedings series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2663-9467
pISSN - 2663-9459
DOI - 10.31580/sps.v2i1.1241
Subject(s) - negotiation , stakeholder , software requirements , process (computing) , computer science , process management , software , knowledge management , software engineering , order (exchange) , personal software process , software development , engineering management , business , software construction , engineering , public relations , political science , finance , law , programming language , operating system
Requirements negotiation is a centralized process of making a decision in order to resolve conflicts in the requirements of the stakeholder. The negotiation will enable the shared vision of software to be developed among the heterogeneous stakeholder in the software industry to be achieved. Many process models used for the negotiation of stakeholder’s requirements have been proposed for the software industry by the research community, yet the acceptance of these process models is discouraging. This study tends to investigate the inadequate adoption of requirements negotiation process models. Further, it finds the acceptance criteria for the software industry to adopt requirements negotiation models. Finding shows that the software industries do not adopt the process models. The perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use and many more criteria have been identified through the literature review on the general criteria of software systems acceptance.