RESUMO
Teleworking refers to the utilization of information and communication technologies for work done outside the workplace. The Covid-19 crisis led to increased utilisation of social networking tools within enterprises, especially when working remotely. The aim of their use is often to improve situational awareness, coordination, and collaboration amongst employees. Online social transparency, typically done through social networks or enterprise social software, refers to the voluntary sharing of personal and contextual information such as those relating to their own and team status, intentions, motivation, capabilities, goal priorities besides updates on the physical and social context, with other colleagues. An ad-hoc practice of social transparency can introduce risks such as information overload, social loafing and peer pressure. Despite recognising its adverse effects, there is a lack of systematic methods that identify and assess the risks of online social transparency. In this paper, we present a method to identify and evaluate these within enterprises. We present the method's workflow, stakeholders, the novel artefacts and techniques devised to use and the outcomes to produce. We evaluate our proposed method by applying it in a real organisational context and assess applicability, efficiency, and effectiveness in identifying risks and supporting managers in risk assessment. The results showed that the method gives a framework of thinking and analysis and helps recognize and identify risks in a specialized manner.
RESUMO
Requirement elicitation stands as a pivotal activity within requirement engineering, gaining even greater significance in the context of global software development. Effective communication among stakeholders assumes paramount importance in this arena. Factors such as time zone disparities, cultural variations, and language differences exert a formidable impact on communication within the sphere of global software development. These dynamics inevitably impinge upon timely coordination, potentially compromising the software's quality. In response, researchers have proffered communication models tailored for requirement elicitation within the ambit of global software development. The purpose of this study is to conduct an in-depth critical review of existing communication models for demand elicitation in global software development. Through this comprehensive review, we aim to discern prevailing publication trends, provide an introductory overview, and illuminate the strengths and limitations inherent in the existing communication models. By identifying these limitations, we seek to advance a novel, low-cost communication approach designed primarily for demand elicitation in global software development. To culminate our endeavor, we will undertake a case study-based experiment, meticulously designed to assess the efficacy and practical utility of the proposed techniques.