When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements Engineering

The major goal of a pre-sales phase is to provide customers with a compelling offer that exactly fits their needs. For its creation not only sales but also requirements engineering activities take place. The latter are needed to translate the customers’ needs to features, to efforts, and eventually...

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Main Author: Christoph Oemig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Riga Technical University Press 2015-07-01
Series:Complex Systems Informatics and Modeling Quarterly
Subjects:
Online Access:https://csimq-journals.rtu.lv/article/view/1077
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author Christoph Oemig
author_facet Christoph Oemig
author_sort Christoph Oemig
collection DOAJ
description The major goal of a pre-sales phase is to provide customers with a compelling offer that exactly fits their needs. For its creation not only sales but also requirements engineering activities take place. The latter are needed to translate the customers’ needs to features, to efforts, and eventually to costs. Although this sounds like business as usual, compared to conventional requirements engineering, there are substantial differences: the pre-sales phase entails challenges (e.g., a limited duration, a steadily moving target or the supplier’s pre-investment) having a tremendous impact on all of these activities. With their conventional approach requirements engineering professionals are doomed to fail. However, an appropriate requirements engineering approach for the pre-sales phase remains to be defined. To address this issue the principal idea is to investigate typical customer engagement types and to conduct a risk analysis revealing the details of the pre-sales phase’s challenges. The results deliver the basis informing the design of a new and capable approach. This article contributes the resulting concept and tools for successful pre-sales requirements engineering. They provide the risk responses and exit criteria to the pre-sales phase’s challenges. The proposed approach even turns analysts into “boxers” when tackling one of the most difficult pre-sales problems: the moving target.
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spelling doaj-art-e0b59a63bfdb4743bc096cc1224d30ff2025-02-03T12:03:21ZengRiga Technical University PressComplex Systems Informatics and Modeling Quarterly2255-99222015-07-010311410.7250/csimq.2015-3.01712When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements EngineeringChristoph Oemig0Denkwerk.MetaebeneThe major goal of a pre-sales phase is to provide customers with a compelling offer that exactly fits their needs. For its creation not only sales but also requirements engineering activities take place. The latter are needed to translate the customers’ needs to features, to efforts, and eventually to costs. Although this sounds like business as usual, compared to conventional requirements engineering, there are substantial differences: the pre-sales phase entails challenges (e.g., a limited duration, a steadily moving target or the supplier’s pre-investment) having a tremendous impact on all of these activities. With their conventional approach requirements engineering professionals are doomed to fail. However, an appropriate requirements engineering approach for the pre-sales phase remains to be defined. To address this issue the principal idea is to investigate typical customer engagement types and to conduct a risk analysis revealing the details of the pre-sales phase’s challenges. The results deliver the basis informing the design of a new and capable approach. This article contributes the resulting concept and tools for successful pre-sales requirements engineering. They provide the risk responses and exit criteria to the pre-sales phase’s challenges. The proposed approach even turns analysts into “boxers” when tackling one of the most difficult pre-sales problems: the moving target.https://csimq-journals.rtu.lv/article/view/1077Pre-sales requirements engineering, box fighting, Miller Heiman sales approach.
spellingShingle Christoph Oemig
When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements Engineering
Complex Systems Informatics and Modeling Quarterly
Pre-sales requirements engineering, box fighting, Miller Heiman sales approach.
title When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements Engineering
title_full When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements Engineering
title_fullStr When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements Engineering
title_full_unstemmed When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements Engineering
title_short When Analysts turn into Boxers: An Introduction to Pre-Sales Requirements Engineering
title_sort when analysts turn into boxers an introduction to pre sales requirements engineering
topic Pre-sales requirements engineering, box fighting, Miller Heiman sales approach.
url https://csimq-journals.rtu.lv/article/view/1077
work_keys_str_mv AT christophoemig whenanalyststurnintoboxersanintroductiontopresalesrequirementsengineering