An object oriented approach to Web-based applications design
Theory and Practice of Object Systems - Special issue objects, databases, and the WWW
2QCV2Q: a model for web sites design and evaluation
Proceedings of the 2000 information resources management association international conference on Challenges of information technology management in the 21st century
Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity
Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity
Requirements Engineering: Processes and Techniques
Requirements Engineering: Processes and Techniques
Building Web Applications with Uml
Building Web Applications with Uml
User-Centered Requirements Engineering: Theory and Practice
User-Centered Requirements Engineering: Theory and Practice
Evaluating and Designing the Quality of Web Sites
IEEE MultiMedia
E-commerce Site Evaluation: a Case Study
EC-WEB '00 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Electronic Commerce and Web Technologies
Patterns for e-business: A Strategy for Reuse
Patterns for e-business: A Strategy for Reuse
Choosing the "rightweight" model for web site quality evaluation
ICWE'03 Proceedings of the 2003 international conference on Web engineering
Agile web engineering (AWE) process: multidisciplinary stakeholders and team communication
ICWE'03 Proceedings of the 2003 international conference on Web engineering
Client needs and the design process in web projects
Journal of Web Engineering
Evaluating the perceived and estimated quality in use of Web 2.0 applications
Journal of Systems and Software
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Requirements analysis constitutes a critical phase in the development of software systems, and for Web sites it can often be a determining factor in the success of the company or organisation. A thorough requirements elicitation will take into considerations the objectives and needs of all the actors involved. It is therefore important for an analyst to have conceptual instruments that support their identification, taking into account the different components of a Web site. In this paper we propose the application of a quality model - the 2QCV3Q meta-model - to the activities related to the requirements engineering process. To illustrate this we describe the requirements analysis for an ONLUS organisation called "No Pain for Children", a nonprofit association for promotion of analgesic treatment. Developed to evaluate the quality of existing Web sites, the meta-model proved to be a useful tool also in gathering and negotiating the requirements. In particular, it was possible to highlight from its conception the priorities of the newly founded association and also the potential areas of conflict between the objectives of the association (and its promoters) and the needs of the doctors and families involved with it.