Alignment of Stakeholder Expectations about User Involvement in Agile Software Development
Jim Buchan, Muneera Bano, Didar Zowghi, Stephen MacDonell, Amrita, Shinde

TL;DR
This study explores how expectations about user involvement in Agile software development differ between developers and users, proposing a novel method to assess and improve alignment to enhance project success.
Contribution
It introduces a new qualitative method using Repertory Grids to measure expectation alignment among stakeholders in Agile projects.
Findings
Expectations vary between development teams and users.
The RG instrument effectively identifies expectation misalignments.
Alignment can be assessed proactively during projects.
Abstract
Context: User involvement is generally considered to contributing to user satisfaction and project success and is central to Agile software development. In theory, the expectations about user involvement, such as the PO's, are quite demanding in this Agile way of working. But what are the expectations seen in practice, and are the expectations of user involvement aligned among the development team and users? Any misalignment could contribute to conflict and miscommunication among stakeholders that may result in ineffective user involvement. Objective: Our aim is to compare and contrast the expectations of two stakeholder groups (software development team, and software users) about user involvement in order to understand the expectations and assess their alignment. Method: We have conducted an exploratory case study of expectations about user involvement in an Agile software development.…
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