Design and use of software architectures: adopting and evolving a product-line approach
Design and use of software architectures: adopting and evolving a product-line approach
A cooperative model for cross-divisional product development for a software product line
Proceedings of the first conference on Software product lines : experience and research directions: experience and research directions
Building product populations with software components
Proceedings of the 24th International Conference on Software Engineering
Widening the Scope of Software Product Lines - From Variation to Composition
SPLC 2 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Software Product Lines
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Software product families have found broad adoption in the embedded systems industry. Product family thinking has been prevalent in this context for mechanics and hardware and adopting the same for software has been viewed as a logical approach. During recent years, however, the trends of convergence, end-to-end solutions, shortened innovation and R&D cycles and differentiation through software engineering capabilities have lead to a development where organizations are stretching the scope of their product families far beyond the initial design. Failing to adjust the product family approach, including the architectural and process dimensions when the business strategy is changing is leading to several challenging problems that can be viewed as symptoms of this approach. This paper discusses the key symptoms, the underlying causes for these symptoms as well as solutions for realigning the product family approach with the business strategy.