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Institute for Development Policy and Management
Part of the School of Environment and Development (SED)

IDPM Working papers

This Working Paper is part of the Development Informatics series

Analysing the Organisational Risk and Change of CMM Software Process Improvement in a Nearshoring Firm

Martha Marcias-Garza & Richard Heeks

Abstract

Nearshoring and offshoring of software work to developing countries is an activity with high uncertainty. Developing country firms have tried to reduce uncertainty by adopting software process improvement initiatives - such as ISO 900X and CMM - that lead to appraisal or certification. Relatively little, though, is known about the organisational risks and change involved with such appraisal in developing countries. This paper provides a case study to address this issue: the attempt by a Mexican nearshoring software firm - Softtek - to attain CMM's highest level of quality measure.

Avoiding the limitations of simple factor-based approaches to analysing software process improvement the paper, instead, uses a contingent model - the design-reality gap model - as its framework for analysis. It applies the model to identify initial sources of risk, and then shows how those risks were addressed by management in order to successfully achieve CMM appraisal. The design-reality gap model is thus shown to be a useful tool for analysis of risk and change in software firms - nearshoring, offshoring, and others. Some tentative lessons for management of software process improvement are also drawn.

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