Search this site
Embedded Files
Scrum Pattern Group
  • Scrum PLoP
    • Scrum Tulip PLoP 2021 - Enkhuizen Netherlands
    • Scrum PLoP 2019
    • Scrum PLoP 2018, Quinta da Pacheca, Portugal
    • ScrumPLoP 2017, Quinta da Pacheca, Portugal
    • ScrumPLoP 2016, Porto, Portugal
    • ScrumPLoP 2015, Porto, Portugal
    • ScrumPLoP 2014, Helsingør, Denmark
    • ScrumPLoP 2013, Helsingør, Denmark
    • ScrumPLoP 2012, Helsingør, Denmark
    • ScrumPLoP 2011, Helsingør, Denmark
    • ScrumPLoP 2010, Stora Nyteboda, Sweden
  • Original Org Patterns Site
    • Organizational Patterns of Agile Software Development
      • Book Outline
        • Preface
        • History and Introduction
          • An Overview of Patterns and Organizational Patterns
          • What Are Patterns?
          • What Are Pattern Languages?
          • Organizational Pattern Languages
          • How the Patterns Came to Us
          • Gathering Organizational Data
          • Creating Sequences
          • History and Related Work
          • Introspection and Analysis of Organizations
          • Shortcomings of State of the Art
          • Analyzing Roles and Relationships
          • How to Use this Book
          • Reading the Patterns
          • Applying the Patterns
          • Updating the Patterns
          • Who Should Use This Book?
          • Size the Organization
          • The CRC-Card Methodology
        • The Pattern Languages
        • Organizational Design Patterns
          • Project Management Pattern Language
          • Community of Trust
          • Size the Schedule
          • Get On With It
          • Named Stable Bases
          • Incremental Integration
          • Private World
          • Build Prototypes
          • Take No Small Slips
          • Completion Headroom
          • Work Split
          • Recommitment Meeting
          • Work Queue
          • Informal Labor Plan
          • Development Episode
          • Implied Requirements
          • Developer Controls Process
          • Work Flows Inward
          • Programming Episode
          • Someone Always Makes Progress
          • Team per Task
          • Sacrifice One Person
          • Day Care
          • Mercenary Analyst
          • Interrupts Unjam Blocking
          • Don't Interrupt an Interrupt'
          • Piecemeal Growth Pattern Language
          • Size the Organization
          • Phasing It In
          • Apprenticeship
          • Solo Virtuoso
          • Engage Customers
          • Surrogate Customer
          • Scenarios Define Problem
          • Firewalls
          • Gatekeeper
          • Self-Selecting Team
          • Unity of Purpose
          • Team Pride
          • Skunkworks
          • Patron Role
          • Diverse Groups
          • Public Character
          • Matron Role
          • Holistic Diversity
          • Legend Role
          • Wise Fool
          • Domain Expertise in Roles
          • Subsystem by Skill
          • Moderate Truck Number
          • Compensate Success
          • Failed Project Wake
          • Developing in Pairs
          • Developing in Pairs
          • Engage Quality Assurance
          • Application Design is Bounded by Test Design
          • Group Validation
        • Organization Construction Patterns
          • Organizational Style Pattern Language
          • Few Roles
          • Producer Roles
          • Producers in the Middle
          • Stable Roles
          • Divide and Conquer
          • Conway's Law
          • Organization Follows Location
          • Organization Follows Market
          • Face-to-Face Before Working Remotely
          • Form Follows Function
          • Shaping Circulation Realms
          • Distribute Work Evenly
          • Responsibilities Engage
          • Hallway Chatter
          • Decouple Stages
          • Hub Spoke and Rim
          • Move Responsibilities
          • Upside-Down Matrix Management
          • The Water Cooler
          • Three to Seven Helpers per Role
          • Coupling Decreases Latency
          • People and Code Pattern Language
          • Architect Controls Product
          • Architecture Team
          • Lock 'Em Up Together
          • Smoke Filled Room
          • Stand Up Meeting
          • Deploy Along the Grain
          • Architect Also Implements
          • Generics and Specifics
          • Standards Linking Locations
          • Code Ownership
          • Feature Assignment
          • Variation Behind Interface
          • Private Versioning
          • Loose Interfaces
          • Subclass Per Team
          • Hierarchy of Factories
          • Parser Builder
        • Foundations and History
          • Organizational Principles
          • Priming the Organization for Change
          • Dissonance Precedes Resolution
          • Team Burnout
          • Stability and Crisis Management
          • The Open-Closed Principle of Teams
          • Team Building
          • Building on the Solid Core
          • Piecemeal Growth
          • Some General Rules
          • Make Love Not War
          • Organizational Patterns are Inspiration Rather Than Prescription
          • It Depends on Your Role in Your Organization
          • It Depends on the Context of the Organization
          • Organizational Patterns are Used by Groups Rather Than Individuals
          • People are Less Predictable than Code
          • The Role of Management
          • Anthropological Foundations
          • Patterns in Anthropology
          • Beyond Process to Structure and Values
          • Roles and Communication
          • Social Network Analysis
          • Distilling the Patterns
          • CRC Cards and Roles
          • Social Network Theory Foundations
          • Scatterplots and Patterns
        • Case Studies
          • Borland QuattroPro for Windows
          • A Hyperproductive Telecommunications Development Team
      • Appendices
        • Summary Patlets
        • Organization Book Patlets
        • Bibliography
        • Photo Credits
      • Mysteriously Missing
      • Supporting Pages
        • Common Pattern Language
        • Organizational Patterns
        • Diversity of Membership
        • Parking Lot
        • IndentationHint
        • Starting Points
          • Project Index
        • OrganizationBookPatternTable
      • Stuff to do
  • Original Scrum Patterns Site Archive
    • Scrum as Organizational Patterns
    • Scrum Patterns Summary
    • Software Scrum Patterns
    • First-Level Scrum Patterns
  • The ScrumPLoP Mission
  • What is a PLoP?
Scrum Pattern Group

Implied Requirements

FSA (Farm Security Administration) home supervisor Miss Harton helping one of borrowers' families cut patterns and make their own clothes. Caswell County, North Carolina. Pattern parts such as sleeves are named chunks of functionality, well understood by the customer.

...a ProductInitiative [BibRef-Cunningham1996] has identified the direction for further development and a MarketWalk-through [BibRef-Cunningham1996] has explored the customer motivation and developmental possibilities behind it. We expect positions and attitudes to be understood but have yet to make any commitments beyond everyone's general commitment to do a good job by the company. 

✥ ✥ ✥

A commitment implies an agreement between people. Development commitments generally obligate developers to meet some customer need in a timely and satisfactory way. The tension here is to define a need in sufficient detail that commitments have meaning without exhausting up-front analysis or over constraining a solution. 

Therefore: 

Select and name chunks of functionality. Use names that would have meaning to customers consistent with the ProductInitiative. Allow these names to imply customer requirements without actually enumerating requirements in the traditional sense. 

✥ ✥ ✥

Examples:

    • Year-End Tax Reports

    • Dollar Denominated Japanese Bonds

    • High-Quality Printing

    • Disconnected Operation on Lap-Tops

These names will fill in the blank in the recurring questions like: Who's handling the programming (or specification, or customer contact, or manual update, or release notes) for __. 

A version of this pattern first appeared in [BibRef-Cunningham1996].

Copyright © 2026 The Scrum Patterns Group
Report abuse
Page details
Page updated
Report abuse