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A change request (aka Change Control Request, or CCR) is a document containing a call for an adjustment of a
system A system is a group of Interaction, interacting or interrelated elements that act according to a set of rules to form a unified whole. A system, surrounded and influenced by its environment (systems), environment, is described by its boundaries, ...
; it is of great importance in the
change management process The change request management process in systems engineering is the process of requesting, determining attainability, planning, implementing, and evaluating of changes to a system. Its main goals are to support the processing and traceability of cha ...
.


Purpose and elements

A change request is declarative, i.e. it states what needs to be accomplished, but leaves out how the change should be carried out. Important elements of a change request are an ID, the customer (ID), the deadline (if applicable), an indication whether the change is required or optional, the change type (often chosen from a domain-specific ontology) and a change
abstract Abstract may refer to: * ''Abstract'' (album), 1962 album by Joe Harriott * Abstract of title a summary of the documents affecting title to parcel of land * Abstract (law), a summary of a legal document * Abstract (summary), in academic publishi ...
, which is a piece of narrative (Keller, 2005). An example of a change request can be found in Figure 1 on the right.


Sources

Change requests typically originate from one of five sources: # problem reports that identify
bugs Bugs may refer to: * Plural of bug Arts, entertainment and media Fictional characters * Bugs Bunny, a character * Bugs Meany, a character in the ''Encyclopedia Brown'' books Films * ''Bugs'' (2003 film), a science-fiction-horror film * ''Bugs ...
that must be fixed, which forms the most common source # system enhancement requests from users # events in the development of other systems # changes in underlying structure and or standards (e.g. in software development this could be a new operating system) # demands from senior management (Dennis, Wixom & Tegarden, 2002). Additionally, in Project Management, change requests may also originate from an unclear understanding of the goals and the objectives of the project.Nielsen, Dave
"How to Control Change Requests"
''PM Hut'', November 15, 2009. Retrieved on March 2, 2010.


Synonyms

Change requests have many different names, which essentially describe the same concept: * Request For Change (RFC) by Rajlich (1999); RFC is also a common term in ITIL (Keller, 2005) and PRINCE2 (Onna & Koning, 2003). * Engineering Change (EC) by Huang and Mak (1999); * Engineering Change Request (ECR) at Aero (Helms, 2002); * Engineering Change Order (ECO) by Loch and Terwiesch (1999) and Pikosz and Malmqvist (1998). Engineering Change Order is a separate step after ECR. After ECR is approved by Engineering Department then an ECO is made for making the change; * Change Notice at Chemical (Helms, 2002); * Action Request (AR) at ABB Robotics AB (Kajko-Mattson, 1999); * Change Request (CR) is, among others, used by Lam (1998), Mäkäräinen (2000), Dennis, et al. (2002), Crnkovic, Asklund and Persson-Dahlqvist (2003) and at ABB Automation Products AB (Kajko-Mattsson, 1999). * Operational Change Request (OCR). * Enterprise Change Request (ECR).


See also

*
Change management (engineering) The change request management process in systems engineering is the process of requesting, determining attainability, planning, implementing, and evaluating of changes to a system. Its main goals are to support the processing and traceability of cha ...
* Change control * Change order * Engineering Change Order


References


Further reading

*Crnkovic I., Asklund, U. & Persson-Dahlqvist, A. (2003). ''Implementing and Integrating Product Data Management and Software Configuration Management''. London: Artech House. *Dennis, A., Wixom, B.H. & Tegarden, D. (2002). ''System Analysis & Design: An Object-Oriented Approach with UML''. Hoboken, New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. *Helms, R.W. (2002). ''Product Data Management as enabler for Concurrent Engineering''. PhD dissertation. Eindhoven: Eindhoven University of Technology press. Available online: http://alexandria.tue.nl/extra2/200211339.pdf. *Huang, G.H. & Mak, K.L. (1999). Current practices of engineering change management in UK manufacturing industries. ''International Journal of Operations & Production Management'', 19(1), 21–37. *Kajko-Mattsson, M. (1999). Maintenance at ABB (II): Change Execution Processes (The State of Practice). ''Proceedings of the International Conference on Software Maintenance'', 307–315. *Keller, A. (2005). Automating the Change Management Process with Electronic Contracts. ''Proceedings of the 2005 Seventh IEEE International Conference on E-Commerce Technology Workshops'', 99-108. *Lam, W. (1998). Change Analysis and Management in a Reuse-Oriented Software Development Setting. In Pernici, B. & Thanos, C. (Eds.) ''Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering'', 219–236. *Loch, C.H. & Terwiesch, C. (1999). Accelerating the Process of Engineering Change Orders: Capacity and Congestion Effects. ''Journal of Product Innovation Management, 16''(2), 145–159. *Mäkäräinen, M. (2000). ''Software change management processes in the development of embedded software''. PhD dissertation. Espoo: VTT Publications. Available online: http://www.vtt.fi/inf/pdf/publications/2000/P416.pdf. *Onna, M. van & Koning, A. (2003). ''The Little Prince 2: A Practical Guide to Project Management'', Pink Roccade Educational Services/Ten Hagen Stam. *Pikosz, P. & Malmqvist, J. (1998). A comparative study of engineering change management in three Swedish engineering companies. ''Proceedings of the DETC98 ASME Design Engineering Technical Conference'', 78–85. *Rajlich, V. (1999). Software Change and Evolution. In Pavelka, J., Tel, G. & Bartošek, M. (Eds.), ''SOFSEM'99, Lecture Notes in Computer Science 1725'', 189–202. *DiDonato, P. (2001). Oakley Inc, Developing XML systems with (CRF). {{DEFAULTSORT:Change Request Systems engineering Business terms