Software process improvement: practical guidelines for business susccess
Software process improvement: practical guidelines for business susccess
Thinking objectively: software engineering in the small
Communications of the ACM
A framework for evaluation and prediction of software process improvement success
Journal of Systems and Software
Rethinking the concept of commitment in software process improvement
Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems
An Instrument for Measuring the Key Factors of Successin Software Process Improvement
Empirical Software Engineering
Proceedings of the 9th European software engineering conference held jointly with 11th ACM SIGSOFT international symposium on Foundations of software engineering
PRISMS: an Approach to Software Process Improvement for Small to Medium Enterprises
QSIC '03 Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Quality Software
Low-rigour, Rapid Software Process Assessments for Small Software Development Firms
ASWEC '04 Proceedings of the 2004 Australian Software Engineering Conference
An Empirical Investigation of the Key Factors for Success in Software Process Improvement
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
NDT. A Model-Driven Approach for Web Requirements
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Measuring the ROI of Software Process Improvement
IEEE Software
Designing Rich Internet Applications with Web Engineering Methodologies
WSE '07 Proceedings of the 2007 9th IEEE International Workshop on Web Site Evolution
Journal of Web Engineering
Software process improvement success factors for small and medium Web companies: A qualitative study
Information and Software Technology
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This replicated study investigates SPI success factors for small and medium Web companies using data from 20 Pakistani Web companies and 72 respondents. It applies the same theoretical model of SPI success factors, techniques and data collection questionnaire proposed and employed in [17]; however, it differs from [17] in that Dyba investigated SPI success factors for software companies, whereas this study focuses solely on Web companies. Therefore the contribution of this work is twofold: i) to replicate Dyba's study assessing similarity of patterns within the context of small and medium Web companies; ii) to extend the theoretical model proposed in [19] [21] to small and medium Web companies. The significance of six contributing independent variables, 42 sub-factors and the effects of two moderating variables on dependent variable SPI success have been analyzed.