Identify Your Stakeholders Through Nomination
18 December 2024Identifying Stakeholders with the Onion Model
9 January 2025Exhaustive requirements elicitation is critical for successful project outcomes, and it starts with thorough stakeholder identification. A stakeholder checklist is one of the simplest and most effective ways to ensure comprehensive stakeholder identification. This technique offers a structured and quick way to ensure no essential group is overlooked.
This article delves into the stakeholder identification checklist technique, explains the categories included, and outlines how to apply it to your project for optimal results.
What is the Stakeholder Checklist Technique?
The stakeholder checklist technique is a straightforward method that involves walking through a predefined list of generic stakeholder categories. The goal is to take a holistic look at all potential stakeholder groups and accept or eliminate particular groups consciously. This technique reduces the risk of missing a specific stakeholder, and consequently, his or her requirements.
How the Technique Works:
This technique is executed in two rounds.
* First Round (Yes/No Evaluation): For each stakeholder category on the checklist, you simply answer yes or no to determine if the category applies to your project. If a category does not apply, briefly explain why.
* Second Round (Detailed Exploration): For each category marked “Yes,” you conduct a deeper exploration to identify specific stakeholders within that group.
By following this two-step approach, you avoid overlooking important stakeholders.
Stakeholder Categories: The Checklist
Here are the generic stakeholder categories typically included in the checklist, along with brief descriptions:
Customers
Individuals or organizations, external to the organization, who will use or benefit from the product or service the initiative delivers. They drive demand and are a rich source of requirements.
Partners
Business allies or collaborators with whom we work on the project and share its success. The goals of a partner align with the organization’s goals. They share risks and rewards from the initiative. Partners often provide expertise, technology, or resources.
Suppliers
Vendors or providers of goods and services essential for project delivery. Supplier input often shapes operational requirements. It influence the organization’s ability to meet deadlines, maintain quality, and manage costs. Any delays, or shortages of quality issues from a supplier can pose risks to the initiative.
Regulators
External or internal agencies or bodies that impose rules, regulations, and compliance standards your project must adhere to. Non-compliance can lead to fines or legal actions against the organization. Examples of regulators can be governmental agencies, certification bodies (International Organization for Standardization), legal groups, or local authorities.
Shareholders
These can be investors or owners with a vested interest in project success and financial performance. They have a financial interest in the organization and are directly affected by its performance and decision-making.
Employees
Internal staff involved in or impacted by the project. Their insights help shape internal processes and operational needs. Their power can vary based on their role, collective bargaining (unions), or specialized skills. This group requires further analysis, as there are many types of employees like operational staff, subject matter experts: employees with critical knowledge, and contractors to just give some examples.
Managers
Organizational leaders or department heads who provide direction, approval, and oversight. They operate within the organization and play a critical role in executing strategies, overseeing teams, and ensuring that organizational goals are met. Managers are deeply invested in the success of projects and operations. Their power varies based on their position. They are responsible for employees’ performance, morale, and professional development. Finally, managers control budgets, assign resources, and prioritize tasks, making them critical to project success.
Competitors
Rival companies that influence market positioning, competitive analysis, and strategic decisions. Competitors are classified as external stakeholders, though they differ from other stakeholders because their relationship with the organization is often adversarial rather than collaborative. They are not directly involved in an initiative.
Applying the Checklist: Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Perform a Quick Evaluation
Walk through the checklist and ask, “Does this stakeholder group apply to my project?” For each category:
Yes: Mark the category for further exploration.
No: Move on to the next category. Record why this category does not apply.
Step 2: Dive Deeper into Relevant Categories
For each group marked “yes,” conduct a more detailed analysis. This can involve identifying individuals, groups, or organizations within the category. Document your findings.
For example:
Customers – Break this down further into different customer segments or user personas.
Employees – Identify specific departments, project teams, or influential staff members.
Regulators – Determine which regulatory bodies and specific regulations apply. If it is an external regulator, find a representative of this regulator within your organization, e.g. a specific compliance department. A compliance department worker will then play the role of a Regulator.
Step 3: Consolidate Stakeholders
Compile a comprehensive list of stakeholders from each applicable category.
Example: Using the Checklist in a Product Launch Project
Imagine a company planning to launch a new software product. The business analyst applies the stakeholder checklist:
Customers: Yes – End users and client feedback groups are essential.
Partners: No – The project does not involve external business partnerships.
Suppliers: Yes – A cloud service provider supplies essential infrastructure.
Regulators: Yes – The software must comply with GDPR and data privacy laws.
Shareholders: Yes – The board and investors have a vested interest in the product launch success.
Competitors: Yes – Competitor analysis shapes product positioning.
Employees: Yes – Internal developers, sales teams, and support staff are heavily involved.
Managers: Yes – Department heads in IT, marketing, and sales play a role.
The business analyst then dives deeper into each “yes” category to pinpoint specific individuals and departments, ensuring comprehensive requirement identification.
Benefits of Using a Stakeholder Identification Checklist
These are the major benefits of this technique:
1 This technique helps to identify relevant stakeholders without exhaustive analysis upfront. It is simple and fast.
2 It is thorough; it reduces the risk of overlooking critical stakeholder groups.
3 This technique ensures every project starts with the same stakeholder categories, building upon lessons learned from previous initiatives.
4 The checklist can be customized to fit specific industries or project types. It offers flexibility to develop a specific stakeholder checklist over time.
Best Practices for Stakeholder Identification
1 Customize the checklist. You can start with the basic stakeholder categories and adapt it over time to better fit your project or industry.
2 Engage the project team. Involve team members in the process to gather diverse perspectives. You can use the stakeholder nomination technique to find specific stakeholders within the applicable category.
3 Review your stakeholder identification checklist regularly. Revisit the checklist as the project evolves to ensure no new stakeholders emerge.
Conclusion
The stakeholder checklist technique is a simple yet highly effective way to ensure complete stakeholder identification for upcoming requirements elicitation. By applying a structured two-step process, you can efficiently execute your business analysis activities.
References
Guide to Business Analysis Body of Knowledge, IIBA
Requirements Engineering – A good practice guide by Ian Sommerville and Pete Sawyer, 1998
Business Analysis Techniques: 123 essential tools for success by James Cadle and Debra Paul
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