A Quality Framework for Agile Requirements: A Practitioner's Perspective
This addresses the challenge of ensuring quality in agile software development for practitioners, but it is incremental as it builds on existing literature.
The paper tackles the problem of verifying agile requirements, which are inherently incomplete and ambiguous, by developing a quality framework tailored for agile contexts. It presents an initial validation with practitioners, receiving positive feedback.
Verification activities are necessary to ensure that the requirements are specified in a correct way. However, until now requirements verification research has focused on traditional up-front requirements. Agile or just-in-time requirements are by definition incomplete, not specific and might be ambiguous when initially specified, indicating a different notion of 'correctness'. We analyze how verification of agile requirements quality should be performed, based on literature of traditional and agile requirements. This leads to an agile quality framework, instantiated for the specific requirement types of feature requests in open source projects and user stories in agile projects. We have performed an initial qualitative validation of our framework for feature requests with eight practitioners from the Dutch agile community, receiving overall positive feedback.