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Stakeholder-Value

Definition:

alternative1. how well the Stakeholder does what they do.
alternative2. how well the Stakeholder does its Stakeholder-Functions.
alternative3. how well the Stakeholder-Functions perform.

Alternative Names

Concept Number: *XXX
English Master: Stakeholder-Value
Synonyms, Variations & Acronyms: Business-Value, Value

Detailing

Each alternative is really the same, but 2 & 3 are more precise.

Stakeholder-Values describe how well the Stakeholders does what they do as they core business.
Stakeholder-Values exist without the products we are building and using.
Stakeholder-Values should practically never be explaining how well a Product works.

Stakeholder-Values are the Scalar improvements a Stakeholder need or desire.
Product-Values are the Scalar Attributes of a Product.

A Stakeholder would normally have their Stakeholder-Values, irrespective of the Product you are developing. It relates to how well they do, or their business do.
Your Product, with its Product-Values (e.g. Usability), can become the Solutions to satisfy a Stakeholder-Value.

If you Add the Requirement Concept to a Stakeholder-Value, though setting a Goal or a Tolerable Level, we describe how well the Stakeholder wants to do their Function.


Illustrations

Stakeholder-Value
Illustration: a Stakeholder with arrows representing how well (Stakeholder-Value) the Stakeholder does her Function (Job, Hobby, Life). She may or may not use a Product to help her do what she does so well.


Type

Scalar Requirement Type


Examples

Sale.Paperwork
Type: Stakeholder-Value
Scale: average time spent, per sale, doing paperwork related activities.
Meter: look it up in the time management tool.
Past [this year] 2 hours.
Goal [next year] 15 minutes.


see Scale db for an extensive list of examples.


Notes

Stakeholder-Level: Stakeholder-Values, Stakeholder-Functions, Development-Resources, Solution-Constraints.

Product Level: Product-Values, Product-Functions, Development-Resources, Solution-Constraints.

A Product could be developed with Product-Functions and Product-Values to satisfy Stakeholder-Values.

A Stakeholder-Value is 'attached' to a Stakeholder. A Product-Value is 'attached' to a Product.

It can be difficult to determine if a Value or Function is at the Stakeholder Level or the Product Level. Sometimes the Scale you use might even be the same or similar on both levels. What you have to ask is if the value is there without your systems (products/services). 
As an example for a shipping port
User-friendliness. The Stakeholders surly wants some of the ports' systems to be User-friendly, but it is the System that is User-friendly to the users. There is no User-friendliness without the System (Product). It is an interaction between the Systems and the Users. This is therefore a Product-Value
On the Stakeholder side, some Stakeholders want to be efficient at loading cargo. They where loading cargo Before any IT systems, and they wanted to be efficient then too. I'm guessing that at a Port, many of the Stakeholder Values are related to Effectiveness and Efficiency as well as Safety, Accuracy, Traceability, Security, Profitability. In addition they probably have some human needs related values, like job security, training etc. This is all at the Stakeholder Level.


Keyed-Icons

none


Drawn-Icons

see illustration


Stakeholder
Product-Value
Product-Quality
Levels
Stakeholder-Level
Requirement
Business-Value
Goal, Tolerable, Past, Record, Wish, Headline


History-of-Concept









This Concept entered by Kai.

Created by system. Last Modification: Thursday 11 of July, 2019 20:46:59 CEST by Admin (Kai).