The high cost of developing and distributing questionnaires demands that analysts carefully consider the objective of the questionnaire and determine what structure will be most useful to the study and most easily understood by the respondents. Questionnaires should also be tested and, if necessary, modified before being printed and distributed.
As with interviewees, recipients, of questionnaires would be selected for the information they can provide. The analysts should ensure that the respondents, background and experiences qualify them to answer the questions.
6.3.3 Record Review Many kinds of records and reports can provide analysts with valuable information about organizations and operations. In record reviews, analysts examine information that has been recorded about the system and user. Record inspection can be performed at the beginning of the study,
as an introduction, or later in the study, as a basis for comparing, actual operations with the records indicate should be happening. Records
include written policy manuals, regulations and standard operating procedures used by most organizations and a guide for managers and employees. They do not show what activities are actually occurring, where the decision – making power lies, or how tasks are performed. However, they can help analysts understand the system by familiarizing them with what operations must be supported and with formal relations within the organization.
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