e-Services are intangible products, provisioned via the Internet.
Examples include Internet access and Internet radio. Because most
e-services involve multiple enterprises, creating a shared understanding
of the service under development is an issue. Such an e-service
is more difficult to understand than a proposition just consisting
of goods because services lack easily observable physical properties.
Consequently, software engineers must first understand the e-service
itself before they can build effective systems and support for these
services. The authors present the complementary use of two requirements
engineering techniques. Using i* modeling, they explore strategic
goals that enterprises have, and using e3value modeling, they understand
how these goals can result in profitable services for enterprises.
They demonstrate their approach using a case study on Internet radio.This
article is part of a special issue on requirements engineering.
%0 Journal Article
%1 gordijn06
%A Gordijn, J.
%A Yu, E.
%A van der Raadt, B.
%D 2006
%J Software, IEEE
%K evolution i-star complexity
%N 3
%P 26--33
%T e-Service Design Using i* and e3value Modeling
%U http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=1628936
%V 23
%X e-Services are intangible products, provisioned via the Internet.
Examples include Internet access and Internet radio. Because most
e-services involve multiple enterprises, creating a shared understanding
of the service under development is an issue. Such an e-service
is more difficult to understand than a proposition just consisting
of goods because services lack easily observable physical properties.
Consequently, software engineers must first understand the e-service
itself before they can build effective systems and support for these
services. The authors present the complementary use of two requirements
engineering techniques. Using i* modeling, they explore strategic
goals that enterprises have, and using e3value modeling, they understand
how these goals can result in profitable services for enterprises.
They demonstrate their approach using a case study on Internet radio.This
article is part of a special issue on requirements engineering.
@article{gordijn06,
abstract = {e-Services are intangible products, provisioned via the Internet.
Examples include Internet access and Internet radio. Because most
e-services involve multiple enterprises, creating a shared understanding
of the service under development is an issue. Such an e-service
is more difficult to understand than a proposition just consisting
of goods because services lack easily observable physical properties.
Consequently, software engineers must first understand the e-service
itself before they can build effective systems and support for these
services. The authors present the complementary use of two requirements
engineering techniques. Using i* modeling, they explore strategic
goals that enterprises have, and using e3value modeling, they understand
how these goals can result in profitable services for enterprises.
They demonstrate their approach using a case study on Internet radio.This
article is part of a special issue on requirements engineering.},
added-at = {2006-09-18T06:26:07.000+0200},
author = {Gordijn, J. and Yu, E. and van der Raadt, B.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/20afd4d0d7fb086f8875a2f1f6d37827d/neilernst},
citeulike-article-id = {745428},
description = {Not previously uploaded},
interhash = {82b07f51745df37a8d1e8a5da42d83db},
intrahash = {0afd4d0d7fb086f8875a2f1f6d37827d},
journal = {Software, IEEE},
keywords = {evolution i-star complexity},
number = 3,
pages = {26--33},
priority = {0},
timestamp = {2006-09-18T06:26:07.000+0200},
title = {e-Service Design Using i* and e3value Modeling},
url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=1628936},
volume = 23,
year = 2006
}