Naming the Pain in Requirements Engineering: A Design for a Global Family of Surveys and First Results from Germany
D. M\'endez Fern\'andez, S. Wagner

TL;DR
This paper presents a globally designed family of surveys to empirically assess requirements engineering practices, with initial results from Germany revealing common challenges and practices in the field.
Contribution
It introduces a theory-driven, reproducible survey methodology for RE and provides the first empirical results from Germany, establishing a foundation for future global studies.
Findings
Preference for qualitative methods over normative standards in RE
Communication flaws and moving targets are significant RE problems
Survey design is effective for future replication and generalization
Abstract
For many years, we have observed industry struggling in defining a high quality requirements engineering (RE) and researchers trying to understand industrial expectations and problems. Although we are investigating the discipline with a plethora of empirical studies, they still do not allow for empirical generalisations. To lay an empirical and externally valid foundation about the state of the practice in RE, we aim at a series of open and reproducible surveys that allow us to steer future research in a problem-driven manner. We designed a globally distributed family of surveys in joint collaborations with different researchers and completed the first run in Germany. The instrument is based on a theory in the form of a set of hypotheses inferred from our experiences and available studies. We test each hypothesis in our theory and identify further candidates to extend the theory by…
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