Managing change to requirements

By | 26/02/2017

The risk of changes to requirements can be minimized by having a robust requirements gathering process.

For various reasons requirements could still change and it is important to have a process in place to manage these changes when they happen.  Changes need to be prioritised, documented, communicated and implemented if approved.

The main steps and questions to answer when planning the process are set out in the diagram below:

Below sets out an example for proposing a change request process.  This will need to be adapted depending upon circumstance.  This may fit into a set of slides or approach paper to present and gain agreement on.

Raising a change request

Process for raising a change request

  • Changes can be proposed by lead SME, sponsor or project manager
  • The requestor summarises in writing change to be proposed
  • Contact Business Analyst for discussion
  • Changes can now be proposed
  • Change requests will be added to a change request log and communicated at regular project meeting

Outputs

  • Change request form (standard template required)
  • Change request log (standard template required)

Assessing change request

Process for assessing change request

  • The business analyst will co-ordinate and document:
    • Cost and time estimates
    • Benefits
    • Risks
    • Priority
    • Options for meeting change request
    • Prioritisation compared with other requirements
    • Impact analysis – to understand the full impact of the proposed change and the impact of not doing it
  • The stakeholders required to assess change request to be discussed and agreed at regular project meeting

Outputs

  • Updated Change request form
  • Updated Change request log

Making a decision

Process for making a decision

  • The project manager and sponsor will be responsible for approving the change request.
  • The decision (under review, approved, declined or deferred) will then be updated in the change request log and communicated via regular project meeting.

Outputs

  • Updated Change request form
  • Updated Change request log

Implementing an approved change

Process for implementing an approved change

  • The approved change will be incorporated into plans.
  • Establish when the work can start on the change and when it can be implemented

Outputs

  • Updated Business requirements document if applicable
  • Updated Solutions requirements document if applicable
  • Updated test scripts if applicable
  • Implementation

The documentation such as business requirements document and solution requirements document should be updated to ensure traceability.

In an agile environment change will be more fluent but will still need to be managed.  There is only a finite time and capacity for the work to be progressed.  There will still need to be some level of impact assessment to re-prioritise and re-plan to ensure the most valued requirements are delivered first.

Thoughts? Questions? Please share in the comments.

If you have found this article useful then you might like my book – The Business Analysis Handbook – Techniques and Questions for better Business Outcomes.  The book is available from www.koganpage.com and all major print and e-book retailers.

 

Author: Helen Winter

An Management Consultant responsible for structuring programmes, success criteria, mobilisation, management of scope, budget, timely delivery, benefits realisation and stakeholder satisfaction. Helen has led on large transformation programmes to execute delivery along with strategic business outcomes. Helen is also a global business author with publisher Kogan Page where her first book “The Business Analysis Handbook” was a finalist for 2 major industry awards. One was for contribution to project management literature with PMI and the other was the Specialist book category for the business books awards. She is an active member of the APM programme management group. She is currently involved in a focus group sharing examples of good programme management practice and is an established speaker for project management forums. In her free time, she loves sharing her knowledge on her blog BusinessBullet.co.uk which is followed by over 5000 visitors a month.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.