EEMCS

Home > Publications
Home University of Twente
Education
Research
Prospective Students
Jobs
Publications
Intranet (internal)
 
 Nederlands
 Contact
 Sitemap
 Search
 Organisation

EEMCS EPrints Service


13446 On quality issues in networked value constellations
Home Policy Brochure Browse Search User Area Contact Help

Zarvić, N. and Wieringa, R.J. and van Eck, P.A.T. (2008) On quality issues in networked value constellations. In: Pervasive Collaborative Networks. IFIP TC 5 WG 5.5 Ninth Working Conference on VIRTUAL ENTERPRISES, 8-10 Sep 2008, Poznan, Poland. pp. 425-432. IFIP International Federation for Information Processing. Springer. ISSN 1571-5736 ISBN 9780387848365

Full text available as:

PDF
- Univ. of Twente only - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
257 Kb

Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-84837-2_44

Exported to Metis

Abstract

One of the main purposes of collaborative networks is to satisfy specific consumer needs, which one company cannot satisfy alone. With the opening of the internet in the 1990s the number of companies that collaborate by means of computer networks increased rapidly. As far as one of our main foci is the consideration of value object exchanges between the involved business actors, we refer to such collaborative networks as networked value constellations or value webs. The business requirements of networked value constellations need to be enabled and operationalized by means of functional and quality requirements at the IT level. Our paper aims to build a sound understanding of how to plan quality related issues by considering distinct perspectives, namely the business perspective and the information systems perspective. Each perspective requires multiple quality-related considerations. From a business perspective, we have (a) to consider the quality perceptions by the end consumers, (b) to plan the quality of the value objects to be produced, and (c) to plan the quality of the value objects to be transferred. From an information systems perspective we need (d) to plan the quality of the software-intensive systems. The last quality issue, (e) structural properties of the network, has to be applied to both mentioned perspectives. In this paper we provide a framework for discussing and addressing the described quality issues and suggest several techniques in doing so. We point out where these techniques can e used as such and where additional research is required.

Item Type:Conference or Workshop Paper (Full Paper, Other)
Research Group:EWI-IS: Information Systems
Research Program:CTIT-ASSIST: Applied Science of Services for Information Society Technologies
Research Project:VITAL: Value-based IT ALignment
ID Code:13446
Status:Published
Deposited On:09 October 2008
Refereed:Yes
International:Yes
More Information:statisticsmetis

Export this item as:

To request a copy of the PDF please email us request copy

To correct this item please ask your editor

Repository Staff Only: edit this item