Enhancing User-Centered Feature Development: Integrating Design Thinking into Feature-Driven Development

methodologies has gained significant attention in producing user-centric products. Feature-driven development incorporates market demands in a very short period and accomplishes outcomes and interpretations from each iteration. Whereas design thinking is a human-centered approach that keeps the use...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anum Khalid, Safa Tariq, Rohina Akram, Dr. Maryam Kausar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Business Management 2025-06-01
Series:Pakistan Journal of Engineering Technology & Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.iobm.edu.pk/index.php/pjets/article/view/1179
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:methodologies has gained significant attention in producing user-centric products. Feature-driven development incorporates market demands in a very short period and accomplishes outcomes and interpretations from each iteration. Whereas design thinking is a human-centered approach that keeps the user at the core of the decision. This research aims to propose a framework that establishes a bridge between feature-driven development and design thinking, as user needs are not prioritized during feature-driven development due to the main emphasis on feature completion, and to enhance user-centered feature delivery in agile environments. This research investigates the 40 respondents’ opinions, consisting of low-experienced and highly experienced practitioners, drawing on a mixed-methods research design that includes surveys with agile teams. We explore the proposed framework's effects on user specifications, speculation, differentiation, data dissemination, emotional engagement, level of fidelity, user-centric experience, co-creation, realism, and user contentment. The analysis revealed that user satisfaction is influenced by experience levels, with years of experience showing a significant main effect (p = 0.024). Low-experienced individuals had lower satisfaction scores compared to high-experienced individuals. These findings suggest that experience duration plays a key role in shaping user satisfaction. A mean difference of -0.170 indicates lower user satisfaction among less experienced individuals, suggesting that satisfaction varies with experience duration. These findings suggest that variations in user satisfaction are influenced by the duration of experience.
ISSN:2222-9930
2224-2333