1 / 34

Strategies for Engaging End Users to Ensure Project Success William P Mahoney III

Strategies for Engaging End Users to Ensure Project Success William P Mahoney III. Outline. Why is this topic important? Defining a Decision Support System (DSS) Assessing the client’s culture Evolutionary software development process Strategies for optimizing end-user buy-in

ganesa
Download Presentation

Strategies for Engaging End Users to Ensure Project Success William P Mahoney III

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Strategies forEngaging End Usersto Ensure Project SuccessWilliam P Mahoney III

  2. Outline • Why is this topic important? • Defining a Decision Support System (DSS) • Assessing the client’s culture • Evolutionary software development process • Strategies for optimizing end-user buy-in • Case example – Road Weather

  3. NCAR Research Applications Laboratory • Size About 200 people, approximately half are atmospheric scientists, and half are engineers • Mission • Develop Solutions: Work closely with customers to develop applications designed to solve specific problems • Technology Transfer: Transfer knowledge and technology to US government agencies, the private sector, and foreign governments

  4. Why is this topic important? • The importance of connecting science & technology to society is increasing. • Many new technologies are not being implemented. • Developers have traditionally not been well connected to end users. • Learning how to engage end users is critical for advancing technology.

  5. What is being done? • American Meteorological Society has goal to reduce the gap between end users and the weather and climate enterprise. • More companies and research organizations are engaging end users directly. • Technology generators are starting to incorporate operations research concepts into their development cycle.

  6. AMS Commission Organization AMS Commission on the Weather and Climate Enterprise Commissioner: George Frederick Commission Steering Committee Commission Executive Committee Board on Enterprise Planning Chair: Terry Tarbell Board on Enterprise Communication Chair: Matt Parker Board on Enterprise Economic Development Chair: Bill Mahoney

  7. Commercial Weather Services User Community Government Weather Services Universities Weather and Climate Enterprise

  8. AMS Board on Enterprise Economic Development

  9. Decision Support Systems What is a decision support system? • An automated tool that makes decisions? • A semi-automated tool? • A handbook of recommended practices? • Local newspaper or news program? • Student assistant? Answer: All the above!

  10. Assessing the Client’s Needs • It is imperative that you develop a relationship of trust with the client (sponsor and users) in any development process. • Patiently listening to their needs is a critical first step. • You need to understand their world.

  11. Assessing the Culture Before one can consider developing or implementing a DSS, some important questions need to be asked to assess the client’s culture.

  12. Assessing the Culture First Question: • What problem(s) are you trying to solve? You need to understand the users’ decision space Probing questions must be asked several different ways before a potential answer or solution may emerge.

  13. Assessing the Culture 2) What is the culture of the client’s organization? - Would a DSS be seen as threatening? - Does automation pose problems? - Are general support tools viewed positively?

  14. Assessing the Culture • 3) What actual tasks and/or decisions could be supported? • Routine or mundane tasks (e.g., data analysis) • High-level analytical tasks (e.g., information assimilation) • - Critical decisions (e.g., impacting lives or costs)

  15. Assessing the Culture • 4) What job categories would benefit most? • Lower skilled workers • Supervisors • Middle managers • Senior managers • Executives Knowing the job category(s) that will utilize the decision support system will allow intelligent judgments to be made about the design and human factors issues.

  16. Assessing the Culture TRS-80 Computer 5) What technical capabilities exist? - Is there an in-house framework to support the new technology? • Network system (external & internal) • Desktop computers for end-users • Remote field communications (PDAs) • Database of pertinent operations data

  17. Assessing the Culture 6) What are the potential benefits? - Safety - Property Protection - Productivity - Risk Reduction

  18. Assessing the Culture Management Staff 7) Who will champion the technology? - Management vs. staff - Technology push (by management) or pull (from staff)?

  19. Assessing the Culture 8) What are the users’ expectations? This is a big deal! It is critical that users expectations are at the appropriate level when new technologies are introduced. It is always better to error on the side of caution and let the users be creative on how they utilize new capabilities.

  20. Decision Support Systems • Application Categories: • Strategic Planning (condition prediction) • Tactical Planning (alert functions) • Operations Management (productivity) • Incident Management (notification function) • Risk Management • Evaluation of “What if?” scenarios • Training Tool (off-line assessments)

  21. Best Development Process

  22. Decision Support Systems • There are no off-the-shelf plug and play DSSs that can fully address the needs of all end-users. There are no “one-size-fits-all” solutions! • A “bottoms-up” rather than a “tops-down” approach should be used for DSS system development. • Stakeholders need to determine the level of sophistication that is required for their specific DSS application.

  23. Technical Risks & Challenges For Weather Related DSSs

  24. Weather Diagnoses & Forecasts Then Now • The weather information requirements of each user community are now highly specialized. • The weather research community has not traditionally been focused on the individual needs of specific user communities – change is occurring

  25. Weather Diagnoses & Forecasts • What is usually required? • - High resolution information • (misoscale = 40 m to 4 km) • - Rapid updates • (minutes to hours) • Both short term and long lead time (seasonal) forecasts • Diverse set of input data

  26. Weather Diagnoses & Forecasts Tmax Users are now seeking: - Probability metrics (or confidence) for key meteorological parameters Example: “What is the probability of the high temperature Reaching 95F between 4 and 6 pm tomorrow?” “What is the probability of 3 inches of rain falling into my reservoir?”

  27. Research Needs • Weather DSS Testbeds should be established in end-user operational environments to test advanced “products” (methods, techniques, etc.) and to learn how end-users utilize the new information. • Testbeds should be used to evaluate: • how to communicate uncertainty • new presentation options • how users interpret products • identify knowledge gaps in atmospheric science • societal aspects of new capabilities

  28. Research Needs • Weather DSS Testbeds for a variety of economic sectors could be established. Industry partners could help offset costs (in-kind contributions, hosting of technology, etc.) • Weather DSS Testbeds: Agriculture Aviation Surface Transportation Human Health Energy Construction Water Resources Emergency Management

  29. Winter Road Maintenance Case Example

  30. MDSS User Needs Acquisition • Surface Transportation Weather Decision Support System Requirements (STWDSR) • Identified large Stakeholder Group • Discussed overall goals and objectives with large stakeholder group • Created focus group from stakeholder group • Assessed current practice • Developed concept of operations • Developed prototype design • Developed prototype – first step that code was written! • Demonstrated prototype • Iterated • Kept stakeholders in the loop throughout process

  31. Current Capabilities The highway maintenance managers currently use newspapers, Weather Channel, USA Today, NWS, and private meteorologists to make decisions. Road weather information systems are not integrated with road management systems. The winter road maintenance decision process is generally reactive in nature.

  32. Expressed User Needs • On a plow route by plow route basis, users want: • Treatment Type (chemical, plow, sand, etc.) • Treatment Amount (lbs per lane mile, etc.) • Treatment Location (plow routes) • Treatment Timing (start/end)

  33. MDSS Products • Weather parameters • Air temperature • Relative humidity • Wind speed and direction • Precipitation type, rate, accumulation • Road Parameters • Road temperature • Bridge temperature • Bridge frost potential • Blowing snow potential • Road contamination & chemical concentration • Treatment Recommendations • Treatment Type • Treatment Location • Treatment Amount

  34. Thank You

More Related