CHAPTER 7The XCellR8™ Approach: Completeness Tests

“Well, I look at it, then I look at it some more, then I look at it again, and when I cannot look at it any more, I say it’s complete!”

—A client, when asked “How do you know when yourrequirements document is complete?”

You have learned so far that the business event is the basic unit of analysis to start with when eliciting business requirements. For the documentation of the business event to be complete, it should include the following information:

  1. Event name

  2. Process name associated with the business event

  3. Trigger(s) to the process

  4. Process description, written in business terms

  5. Information required to support the business event

  6. Rules governing the response to the event

  7. Relationships among ...

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