Achieving Consensus in Business Requirements Elicitation Meetings Making sure that you define the Right Problem before attempting to resolve it Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 1 Achieving Consensus on and Quality of Business Requirements • The quality of Business Requirements has a fundamental influence on a project’s ability to properly control the entire engineering process. • Changes to Business Requirements impact project plans, activities, and work products. • Achieving consensus on and high quality of Business Requirements early in the SDLC greatly reduces the probability of making disruptive changes to engineering process activities in response to inaccurate, incomplete, ambiguous, or conflicting Business Requirements. Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 2 Business Requirements Elicitation Sessions • Business Requirements Elicitation Sessions are aimed at leading a group into discovering and documenting Business Requirements that are: accurate, complete (or very close to), unambiguous, and consistent. • Success factors for such sessions depend on: – Including the right participants – Properly managing conflict among participants during the session – Properly capturing and communicating the decisions made during the session Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 3 Conflicts in Requirements Elicitation Meetings • Conflict naturally arise from the following predispositions of meeting participants [H. Kurstedt, 2000]: – – – – – Different backgrounds Different personalities Different goals Different opinions Different expectations • Some meeting participants may not be aware of the existence of a conflict unless it is explicitly addressed and properly managed Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 4 Conflicts in Requirements Elicitation Meetings • Mismanaged conflict can induce the following in meeting participants [H. Kurstedt, 2000]: – Reduce tolerance among group members – Reduce commitment or support to final decisions – Reduce trust among group members – Reduce the amount of information shared among group members – Reduce the quality of the group decision Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 5 Conflict Resolution Styles [H. Kurstedt, 2000] Common English Phrase Conflict Resolution Style Examples “Leave well enough alone” Avoidance -Diffusion -Resignation -Cover-up -Isolation -Withdrawal -Indifference -Refusal “Kill your enemies with Accommodation kindness” -Giving in -Smoothing “Split the difference” Compromise -Negotiation -Arbitration “Two heads are better than one” Collaboration -Logical reasoning -Cooperation Our Preference “Might makes right” Competition -Fighting -Forcing -Overpowering -Confronting Use only when needed Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 6 Conflict Resolution Strategy by types of situation [H. Kurstedt, 2000] Social Conflict (irrational, emotional) Competitive Conflict Resolution Collaborative Conflict Resolution Task Conflict (rational, logical, factual) -For emergencies -When unpopular actions need to be implemented -To protect yourself from other taking advantage of non competitive behavior -To reduce hostility between groups -To refocus the group on the task again -When meeting purpose is complex -To gain commitment -To Increase critical thinking -To Increase strength of consensus -To Increase decision quality Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 7 Collaborative Conflict Management • Collaborative conflict management is best when: – There is sufficient time for making decisions – Information can be shared in a non-threatening environment • Collaborative conflict management allows: – Producing a shared understanding of information – A high degree of group satisfaction – Win/win situations Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 8 Steps to Strong Consensus and High Decision Quality [H. Kurstedt, 2000]: • 1 -Inform group members prior to meeting that they are expected to collaborate • 2-Plan informal ice-breakers before consensus meeting starts • 3-Use structured conflict techniques • 4-Establish an incentive structure (reward for collaborating) • 5-Anticipate social conflicts and quickly resolve them • 6-Make provision for sufficient meeting time to focus on task conflict Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 9 Hall’s Consensus Guidelines • “Avoid arguing for your own rankings. Present your position as lucidly and logically as possible, but listen to the other member’s reactions and consider them carefully before you press your point.” Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 10 Hall’s Consensus Guidelines • “Do not assume that someone must lose when the discussion reaches a stalemate. Instead, look for the next-most-acceptable alternative for all parties.” Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 11 Hall’s Consensus Guidelines • “Do not change your mind simply to avoid conflict and reach agreement and harmony. When agreement seems to come too quickly and easily, be suspicious. Explore the reasons and be sure everyone accepts the solution for basically similar or complementary reasons. Yield only to positions that have objective and logically sound foundations.” Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 12 Hall’s Consensus Guidelines • “Avoid conflict-reducing techniques such as majority vote, averages, coin flips, and bargaining. When a dissenting member finally agrees, don’t feel that he or she must be rewarded by having his or her own way on some later point.” Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 13 Hall’s Consensus Guidelines • “Differences of opinions are natural and expected. Seek them out and try to involve everyone in the decision process. Disagreements can help the group’s decision because, with a wide range of information and opinions, there is a greater chance that the group will hit upon more adequate solutions.” Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 14 Contact Didier at Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting to conduct effective Business Requirements Elicitation meetings using Industry’s Best Practices http://pragmaticohesion.com/ Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Pragmatic Cohesion Consulting 15