How business and software analysts explore, document, and negotiate requirements for enterprise systems is critical to the benefits their organizations will eventually derive. In this paper, we present a framework for analysis and redesign of networked business systems. It is based on libraries of patterns which are derived from existing Internet businesses. The framework includes three perspectives: Economic value, Business processes, and Application communication, each of which applies a goal-oriented method to compose patterns. By means of consistency relationships between perspectives, we demonstrate the usefulness of the patterns as a light-weight approach to exploration of business ideas.
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@inproceedings{wer200510, author = {Zlatev, Z. and Daneva, M. and Wieringa, R.}, title = {Multi-Perspective Requirements Engineering for Networked Business Systems: A Framework for Pattern Composition}, booktitle = {Anais do Workshop em Engenharia de Requisitos - Proceedings of the 8th Workshop on Requirements Engineering (WER2005)}, year = {2005}, issn = {2675-0066}, isbn = {972-752-079-0}, doi = {} }