Practical relevance of software engineering research: Synthesizing the community's voice
Vahid Garousi, Markus Borg, Markku Oivo

TL;DR
This paper synthesizes community opinions on the relevance of software engineering research, identifying root causes of low relevance and proposing strategies like industry collaboration and appropriate research approaches to enhance practical impact.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of discussions on research relevance in SE, highlighting key causes and solutions to improve industrial applicability.
Findings
Root causes of low relevance identified: simplistic views, lack of industry connection, wrong problem identification.
Key suggestions include using action research, selecting relevant problems, and collaborating with industry.
Encourages community reflection and action to increase research relevance.
Abstract
Software engineering (SE) research should be relevant to industrial practice. There have been regular discussions in the SE community on this issue since the 1980's, led by pioneers such as Robert Glass. As we recently passed the milestone of "50 years of software engineering", some recent positive efforts have been made in this direction, e.g., establishing "industrial" tracks in several SE conferences. However, many researchers and practitioners believe that we, as a community, are still struggling with research relevance and utility. The goal of this paper is to synthesize the evidence and experience-based opinions shared on this topic so far in the SE community, and to encourage the community to further reflect and act on the research relevance. For this purpose, we have conducted a Multi-vocal Literature Review (MLR) of 54 systematically-selected sources (papers and non…
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