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CHAPTER 4
INFORMATION
GATHERING:
INTERACTIVE METHODS
Major Topics
4-2
 Question format
 Interviewing techniques
 Joint Application Design (JAD)
 Questionnaires
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Interviewing
4-3
 Interviewing is an important method for
collecting data on information system
requirements.
 Interviews reveal information about:
 Interviewee opinions.
 Interviewee feelings.
 About the current state of the system.
 Organizational and personal goals.
 Informal procedures.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Planning the Interview
4-4
Five steps in planning the interview are:
 Reading background material.
 Establishing interview objectives.
 Deciding whom to interview.
 Preparing the interviewee.
 Deciding on question types and structure.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Question Types
4-5
There are two basic types of interview
questions:
 Open-ended.
 Closed.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Open-Ended Questions
4-6
 Open-ended interview questions allow
interviewees to respond how they wish, and to
what length they wish.
 Open-ended questions are appropriate when the
analyst is interested in breadth and depth of reply.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Advantages of Open-Ended
Questions4-7
Eight benefits of open-ended questions are:
 Puts the interviewee at ease.
 Allows the interviewer to pick up on the interviewee's
vocabulary.
 Reflect education, values, attitudes, and beliefs.
 Provides richness of detail.
 Reveals avenues of further questioning that may have
gone untapped.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Advantages of Open-Ended
Questions4-8
Eight Benefits of open-ended questions are:
(continued)
 Provides more interest for the interviewee.
 Allows more naturalness.
 Makes phrasing easier for the interviewer.
 Useful if the interviewer is unqualified.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Disadvantages of Open-Ended
Questions4-9
The five drawbacks include:
 May result in too much irrelevant detail.
 Possibly losing control of the interview.
 May take too much time for the amount of useful
information gained.
 Potentially seeming that the interviewer is
unprepared.
 Possibly giving the impression that the interviewer
is on a "fishing expedition”
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Closed Interview Questions
4-10
 Closed interview questions limit the number of
possible responses.
 Closed interview questions are appropriate for
generating precise, reliable data that is easy to
analyze.
 The methodology is efficient, and it requires
little skill for interviewers to administer.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Benefits of Closed Interview
Questions4-11
Six benefits are:
 Saving interview time.
 Easily comparing interviews.
 Getting to the point.
 Keeping control of the interview.
 Covering a large area quickly.
 Getting to relevant data.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Disadvantages of Closed Interview
Questions4-12
Four drawbacks of closed interview questions
include:
 Boring for the interviewee.
 Failure to obtain rich detailing.
 Missing main ideas.
 Failing to build rapport between interviewer and
interviewee.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Attributes of Open-ended and Closed
Questions
4-13
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Bipolar Questions and Probes
4-14
 Bipolar questions are those that may be
answered with a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ or ‘agree’ or
‘disagree’.
 Bipolar questions should be used carefully.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Probing (Interested) Questions
4-15
 Probing questions elicit more detail about
previous questions.
 The purpose of probing questions is:
 To get more meaning.
 To clarify.
 To draw out and expand on the interviewee's
point.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Question Sequencing
4-16
The three basic ways of structuring interviews
are :
 Pyramid, starting with closed questions and
working toward open-ended questions.
 Funnel, starting with open-ended questions and
working toward closed questions.
 Diamond, starting with closed, moving toward
open-ended, and ending with closed questions.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Pyramid Structure
4-17
 Begins with very detailed, often closed
questions
 Expands by allowing open-ended questions
and more generalized responses
 Is useful if interviewees need to be warmed up
to the topic or seem reluctant to address the
topic
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Funnel Structure
4-18
 Begins with generalized, open-ended
questions
 Concludes by narrowing the possible
responses using closed questions
 Provides an easy, nonthreatening way to
begin an interview
 Is useful when the interviewee feels
emotionally about the topic
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Diamond Structure
4-19
 A diamond-shaped structure begins in a very
specific way
 Then more general issues are examined
 Concludes with specific questions
 Combines the strength of both the pyramid
and funnel structures
 Takes longer than the other structures
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Closing the Interview
4-20
 Always ask “Is there anything else that you
would like to add?”
 Summarize and provide feedback on your
impressions.
 Ask whom you should talk with next.
 Set up any future appointments.
 Thank them for their time and shake hands.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Interview Report
4-21
 Write as soon as possible after the interview.
 Provide an initial summary, then more detail.
 Review the report with the respondent.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Joint Application Design (JAD)
4-22
 JAD is a technique that allows the analyst to
accomplish requirements analysis and design
the user interface with the users in a group
setting.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
When to Use JAD
4-23
JAD may be used when:
 Users are restless and want something new.
 The organizational culture supports joint problem-
solving behaviors.
 Analysts forecast an increase in the number of
ideas using JAD.
 Personnel may be absent from their jobs for the
length of time required.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
JAD Personnel
4-24
JAD involves:
 Analysts
 Users
 Executives
 Observers
 Scribe (person who write documents)
 Session leader
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Benefits of JAD
4-25
The potential benefits of using JAD are:
 Time is saved, compared with traditional
interviewing.
 Rapid development of systems.
 Improved user ownership of the system.
 Creative idea production is improved.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Drawbacks of Using JAD
4-26
Potential drawbacks of using JAD are:
 JAD requires a large block of time to be available
for all session participants.
 If preparation is incomplete, the session may not
go very well.
 If the follow-up report is incomplete, the session
may not be successful.
 The organizational skills and culture may not be
conducive to a JAD session.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Questionnaires
4-27
Questionnaires are useful in gathering
information from key organization members
about:
 Attitudes.
 Beliefs. (Thinking)
 Behaviors.
 Characteristics.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
When to Use Questionnaires
4-28
Questionnaires are valuable if:
 Organization members are widely dispersed.
 Many members are involved with the project.
 Investigative work is needed.
 Problem solving prior to interviews is necessary.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Question Types
4-29
Questions are designed as either:
 Open-ended
 Try to anticipate the response you will get.
 Well suited for getting opinions.
 Closed
 Use when all the options may be listed.
 When the options are mutually exclusive.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Open-Ended and Closed
Questions4-30
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Questionnaire Language
4-31
Questionnaire language should be:
 Simple.
 Specific.
 Free of bias.
 Not patronizing (demeaning).
 Technically accurate.
 Addressed to those who are knowledgeable.
 Appropriate for the reading level of the respondent.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Measurement Scales
4-32
 The two different forms of measurement
scales are :
 Nominal.
 Interval.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Nominal Scales
4-33
 Nominal scales are used to classify things into
categories.
 It is the weakest form of measurement.
 Data may be totaled.
What type of software do you use the most?
1 = Word Processor
2 = Spreadsheet
3 = Database
4 = An Email Program
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Interval Scales
4-34
 An interval scale is used when the intervals
are equal.
 There is no absolute zero.
 Examples of interval scales include the
Fahrenheit or centigrade scale.
How useful is the support given by the Technical Support Group?
NOT USEFUL EXTREMELY
AT ALL USEFUL
1 2 3 4 5
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Validity and Reliability
4-35
Questionnaires must be valid and reliable.
 Reliability of scales refers to consistency in
response--getting the same results if the same
questionnaire was administered again under
the same conditions.
 Validity is the degree to which the question
measures what the analyst intends to measure.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Problems with Scales
4-36
There are three problems associated with
poorly constructed scales:
 Leniency (kindness).
 Central tendency (learning).
 Halo (circle of light) effect.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Leniency
4-37
 Caused by easy raters.
 Solution is to move the “average” category to
the left or right of center.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Central Tendency
4-38
Central tendency occurs when respondents
rate everything as average.
 Improve by making the differences smaller at
the two ends.
 Adjust the strength of the descriptors.
 Create a scale with more points.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Halo Effect
4-39
 When the impression formed in one question
carries into the next question
 Solution is to place one trait and several items
on each page.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Designing the Questionnaire
4-40
Good response rates can be achieved with
consistent control of questionnaire.
 Allow ample white space.
 Allow ample space to write or type in responses.
 Make it easy for respondents to clearly mark their
answers.
 Be consistent in style.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Order of Questions
4-41
 Place most important questions first.
 Cluster items of similar content together.
 Introduce less controversial questions first.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Web Form Questionnaires
4-42
Controls (fields) used on Web forms:
 Single line text box.
 Scrolling text box, used for one or more paragraphs of
text.
 Check box for yes-no or true-false answers.
 Radio button for mutually exclusive yes-no or true-
false answers.
 Drop-down menu for selection from a list.
 Submit or Clear buttons.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Methods of Administering the
Questionnaire4-43
Methods of administering the questionnaire
include:
 Convening all concerned respondents together at
one time.
 Personally administering the questionnaire.
 Allowing respondents to self-administer the
questionnaire.
 Mailing questionnaires.
 Administering over the Web or via email.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
Electronically Submitting
Questionnaires4-44
Administering a questionnaire electronically
has the following benefits:
 Reduced costs.
 Collecting and storing the results electronically.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
What is CASE Tool?
 Computer-Aided Software
Engineering (CASE) technologies are tools
that provide automated assistance for
software development.
 The goal of introducing CASE tools is the
reduction of the time and cost of software
development and the enhancement of the
quality of the systems developed.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
4-45
CASE TOOL
 Artiso Visual Case is a tool for software development, database
design, database maintenance and business analysis developed
by Artiso Corp.
 DB-MAIN is a modeling tool dedicated to Database Application
Engineering. It was originally developed by University of
Namur’s LBID Lab. in 1991.
 iGrafx FlowCharter is process analysis and modeling tool
developed by iGrafx.
 MetaEdit+ is a tool for designing a modeling language and then
generates diagramming functionalities. It was developed by
Metacase Company.
 Microsoft Visio is a diagramming program for Microsoft
Windows that uses vector graphics to create diagrams.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
4-46
CASE TOOL
 OmniGraffle is a diagramming application for Mac OS X operating
system developed by The Omni Group. It can create diagrams, flow
charts, org charts, and illustrations.
 Rational Rose is a UML modeling and model-driven development
tool which was developed originally by Rational Software. It has the
ability to integrate with existing integrated development
environments or languages.
 SmartDraw is a diagramming tool developed by SmartDraw.com.
 ArgoUML is a UML diagramming tool written in Java developed by
Tigris. It has an open source BSD License.
 Visible Analyst is an integrated Strategic Planning, Data Modeling,
Business Process Modeling (BPMN), UML Modeling, and
Structured Analysis and Design Modeling developed by Visible.
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
4-47
CASE TOOL
Name Platform Price
DB-Main Windows $0
iGrafx Flowcharter Windows $480
MetaEdit+ Windows €9500
Microsoft Visio Windows $559.95
Omnigraffle MacOS X $199.95
Rational Rose Cross Platform $4870
Smart Draw Windows $197
ArgoUML Cross Platform $0
Visible Analyst Windows $2995
AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
4-48

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Information gathering interactive methods

  • 2. Major Topics 4-2  Question format  Interviewing techniques  Joint Application Design (JAD)  Questionnaires AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 3. Interviewing 4-3  Interviewing is an important method for collecting data on information system requirements.  Interviews reveal information about:  Interviewee opinions.  Interviewee feelings.  About the current state of the system.  Organizational and personal goals.  Informal procedures. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 4. Planning the Interview 4-4 Five steps in planning the interview are:  Reading background material.  Establishing interview objectives.  Deciding whom to interview.  Preparing the interviewee.  Deciding on question types and structure. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 5. Question Types 4-5 There are two basic types of interview questions:  Open-ended.  Closed. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 6. Open-Ended Questions 4-6  Open-ended interview questions allow interviewees to respond how they wish, and to what length they wish.  Open-ended questions are appropriate when the analyst is interested in breadth and depth of reply. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 7. Advantages of Open-Ended Questions4-7 Eight benefits of open-ended questions are:  Puts the interviewee at ease.  Allows the interviewer to pick up on the interviewee's vocabulary.  Reflect education, values, attitudes, and beliefs.  Provides richness of detail.  Reveals avenues of further questioning that may have gone untapped. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 8. Advantages of Open-Ended Questions4-8 Eight Benefits of open-ended questions are: (continued)  Provides more interest for the interviewee.  Allows more naturalness.  Makes phrasing easier for the interviewer.  Useful if the interviewer is unqualified. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 9. Disadvantages of Open-Ended Questions4-9 The five drawbacks include:  May result in too much irrelevant detail.  Possibly losing control of the interview.  May take too much time for the amount of useful information gained.  Potentially seeming that the interviewer is unprepared.  Possibly giving the impression that the interviewer is on a "fishing expedition” AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 10. Closed Interview Questions 4-10  Closed interview questions limit the number of possible responses.  Closed interview questions are appropriate for generating precise, reliable data that is easy to analyze.  The methodology is efficient, and it requires little skill for interviewers to administer. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 11. Benefits of Closed Interview Questions4-11 Six benefits are:  Saving interview time.  Easily comparing interviews.  Getting to the point.  Keeping control of the interview.  Covering a large area quickly.  Getting to relevant data. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 12. Disadvantages of Closed Interview Questions4-12 Four drawbacks of closed interview questions include:  Boring for the interviewee.  Failure to obtain rich detailing.  Missing main ideas.  Failing to build rapport between interviewer and interviewee. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 13. Attributes of Open-ended and Closed Questions 4-13 AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 14. Bipolar Questions and Probes 4-14  Bipolar questions are those that may be answered with a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ or ‘agree’ or ‘disagree’.  Bipolar questions should be used carefully. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 15. Probing (Interested) Questions 4-15  Probing questions elicit more detail about previous questions.  The purpose of probing questions is:  To get more meaning.  To clarify.  To draw out and expand on the interviewee's point. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 16. Question Sequencing 4-16 The three basic ways of structuring interviews are :  Pyramid, starting with closed questions and working toward open-ended questions.  Funnel, starting with open-ended questions and working toward closed questions.  Diamond, starting with closed, moving toward open-ended, and ending with closed questions. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 17. Pyramid Structure 4-17  Begins with very detailed, often closed questions  Expands by allowing open-ended questions and more generalized responses  Is useful if interviewees need to be warmed up to the topic or seem reluctant to address the topic AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 18. Funnel Structure 4-18  Begins with generalized, open-ended questions  Concludes by narrowing the possible responses using closed questions  Provides an easy, nonthreatening way to begin an interview  Is useful when the interviewee feels emotionally about the topic AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 19. Diamond Structure 4-19  A diamond-shaped structure begins in a very specific way  Then more general issues are examined  Concludes with specific questions  Combines the strength of both the pyramid and funnel structures  Takes longer than the other structures AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 20. Closing the Interview 4-20  Always ask “Is there anything else that you would like to add?”  Summarize and provide feedback on your impressions.  Ask whom you should talk with next.  Set up any future appointments.  Thank them for their time and shake hands. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 21. Interview Report 4-21  Write as soon as possible after the interview.  Provide an initial summary, then more detail.  Review the report with the respondent. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 22. Joint Application Design (JAD) 4-22  JAD is a technique that allows the analyst to accomplish requirements analysis and design the user interface with the users in a group setting. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 23. When to Use JAD 4-23 JAD may be used when:  Users are restless and want something new.  The organizational culture supports joint problem- solving behaviors.  Analysts forecast an increase in the number of ideas using JAD.  Personnel may be absent from their jobs for the length of time required. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 24. JAD Personnel 4-24 JAD involves:  Analysts  Users  Executives  Observers  Scribe (person who write documents)  Session leader AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 25. Benefits of JAD 4-25 The potential benefits of using JAD are:  Time is saved, compared with traditional interviewing.  Rapid development of systems.  Improved user ownership of the system.  Creative idea production is improved. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 26. Drawbacks of Using JAD 4-26 Potential drawbacks of using JAD are:  JAD requires a large block of time to be available for all session participants.  If preparation is incomplete, the session may not go very well.  If the follow-up report is incomplete, the session may not be successful.  The organizational skills and culture may not be conducive to a JAD session. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 27. Questionnaires 4-27 Questionnaires are useful in gathering information from key organization members about:  Attitudes.  Beliefs. (Thinking)  Behaviors.  Characteristics. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 28. When to Use Questionnaires 4-28 Questionnaires are valuable if:  Organization members are widely dispersed.  Many members are involved with the project.  Investigative work is needed.  Problem solving prior to interviews is necessary. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 29. Question Types 4-29 Questions are designed as either:  Open-ended  Try to anticipate the response you will get.  Well suited for getting opinions.  Closed  Use when all the options may be listed.  When the options are mutually exclusive. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 31. Questionnaire Language 4-31 Questionnaire language should be:  Simple.  Specific.  Free of bias.  Not patronizing (demeaning).  Technically accurate.  Addressed to those who are knowledgeable.  Appropriate for the reading level of the respondent. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 32. Measurement Scales 4-32  The two different forms of measurement scales are :  Nominal.  Interval. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 33. Nominal Scales 4-33  Nominal scales are used to classify things into categories.  It is the weakest form of measurement.  Data may be totaled. What type of software do you use the most? 1 = Word Processor 2 = Spreadsheet 3 = Database 4 = An Email Program AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 34. Interval Scales 4-34  An interval scale is used when the intervals are equal.  There is no absolute zero.  Examples of interval scales include the Fahrenheit or centigrade scale. How useful is the support given by the Technical Support Group? NOT USEFUL EXTREMELY AT ALL USEFUL 1 2 3 4 5 AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 35. Validity and Reliability 4-35 Questionnaires must be valid and reliable.  Reliability of scales refers to consistency in response--getting the same results if the same questionnaire was administered again under the same conditions.  Validity is the degree to which the question measures what the analyst intends to measure. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 36. Problems with Scales 4-36 There are three problems associated with poorly constructed scales:  Leniency (kindness).  Central tendency (learning).  Halo (circle of light) effect. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 37. Leniency 4-37  Caused by easy raters.  Solution is to move the “average” category to the left or right of center. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 38. Central Tendency 4-38 Central tendency occurs when respondents rate everything as average.  Improve by making the differences smaller at the two ends.  Adjust the strength of the descriptors.  Create a scale with more points. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 39. Halo Effect 4-39  When the impression formed in one question carries into the next question  Solution is to place one trait and several items on each page. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 40. Designing the Questionnaire 4-40 Good response rates can be achieved with consistent control of questionnaire.  Allow ample white space.  Allow ample space to write or type in responses.  Make it easy for respondents to clearly mark their answers.  Be consistent in style. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 41. Order of Questions 4-41  Place most important questions first.  Cluster items of similar content together.  Introduce less controversial questions first. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 42. Web Form Questionnaires 4-42 Controls (fields) used on Web forms:  Single line text box.  Scrolling text box, used for one or more paragraphs of text.  Check box for yes-no or true-false answers.  Radio button for mutually exclusive yes-no or true- false answers.  Drop-down menu for selection from a list.  Submit or Clear buttons. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 43. Methods of Administering the Questionnaire4-43 Methods of administering the questionnaire include:  Convening all concerned respondents together at one time.  Personally administering the questionnaire.  Allowing respondents to self-administer the questionnaire.  Mailing questionnaires.  Administering over the Web or via email. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 44. Electronically Submitting Questionnaires4-44 Administering a questionnaire electronically has the following benefits:  Reduced costs.  Collecting and storing the results electronically. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya
  • 45. What is CASE Tool?  Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE) technologies are tools that provide automated assistance for software development.  The goal of introducing CASE tools is the reduction of the time and cost of software development and the enhancement of the quality of the systems developed. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya 4-45
  • 46. CASE TOOL  Artiso Visual Case is a tool for software development, database design, database maintenance and business analysis developed by Artiso Corp.  DB-MAIN is a modeling tool dedicated to Database Application Engineering. It was originally developed by University of Namur’s LBID Lab. in 1991.  iGrafx FlowCharter is process analysis and modeling tool developed by iGrafx.  MetaEdit+ is a tool for designing a modeling language and then generates diagramming functionalities. It was developed by Metacase Company.  Microsoft Visio is a diagramming program for Microsoft Windows that uses vector graphics to create diagrams. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya 4-46
  • 47. CASE TOOL  OmniGraffle is a diagramming application for Mac OS X operating system developed by The Omni Group. It can create diagrams, flow charts, org charts, and illustrations.  Rational Rose is a UML modeling and model-driven development tool which was developed originally by Rational Software. It has the ability to integrate with existing integrated development environments or languages.  SmartDraw is a diagramming tool developed by SmartDraw.com.  ArgoUML is a UML diagramming tool written in Java developed by Tigris. It has an open source BSD License.  Visible Analyst is an integrated Strategic Planning, Data Modeling, Business Process Modeling (BPMN), UML Modeling, and Structured Analysis and Design Modeling developed by Visible. AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya 4-47
  • 48. CASE TOOL Name Platform Price DB-Main Windows $0 iGrafx Flowcharter Windows $480 MetaEdit+ Windows €9500 Microsoft Visio Windows $559.95 Omnigraffle MacOS X $199.95 Rational Rose Cross Platform $4870 Smart Draw Windows $197 ArgoUML Cross Platform $0 Visible Analyst Windows $2995 AITS-MCA- Kiran Ajudiya 4-48