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Process specification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Process Specification is a generic term for the specification of a process. It is not unique to business activity, but can be applied to any organizational activity.

Within some structured methods, the capitalized term Process Specification refers to a description of the procedure to be followed by an actor within an elementary level business activity, as represented on a process model such as a dataflow diagram or IDEF0 model. A common alias is minispec, short for miniature specification.

Use in systems development[edit]

The process specification defines what must be done to transform inputs into outputs. It is a detailed set of instructions outlining a business procedure that each elementary level business activity is expected to carry out. Process specifications are commonly included as integral components of requirements documents in systems development.

Techniques[edit]

A variety of approaches can be used to produce a process specification, including:

No matter what approach is used, a specification must communicate to system development designers, implementers and support professionals, and be verifiable by stakeholders and end users.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]