The purpose of Verification (VER) is to ensure that selected work products meet their specified requirements.
The Verification process area involves the following: verification preparation, verification performance, and identification of corrective action.
Verification includes verification of the product and intermediate work products against all selected requirements, including customer, product, and product component requirements. Throughout the process areas, where we use the
terms product and product component, their intended meanings also encompass services and their components.
Verification is inherently an incremental process because it occurs throughout the development of the product and work products, beginning with verification of the requirements, progressing through the verification of the evolving
work products, and culminating in the verification of the completed product.
The specific practices of this process area build on each other in the following way:
· The Select Work Products for Verification specific practice enables the identification of the work products to be verified, the methods to be used to perform the verification, and the requirements to be satisfied by each selected
work product.
· The Establish the Verification Environment specific practice enables the determination of the environment that will be used to carry out the verification.
· The Establish Verification Procedures and Criteria specific practice then enables the development of verification procedures and criteria that are aligned with the selected work products, requirements, methods, and characteristics
of the verification environment.
· The Perform Verification specific practice conducts the verification according to the available methods, procedures, and criteria.
Verification of work products substantially increases the likelihood that the product will meet the customer, product, and product component requirements.
The Verification and Validation process areas are similar, but they address different issues. Validation demonstrates that the product, as provided (or as it will be provided), will fulfill its intended use, whereas verification
addresses whether the work product properly reflects the specified requirements. In other words, verification ensures that “you built it right”; whereas, validation ensures that “you built the right thing.”
Peer reviews are an important part of verification and are a proven mechanism for effective defect removal. An important corollary is to develop a better understanding of the work products and the processes that produced them so
that defects can be prevented and process improvement opportunities can be identified.
Peer reviews involve a methodical examination of work products by the producers’ peers to identify defects and other changes that are needed.
Examples of peer review methods include the following:
· Inspections
· Structured walkthroughs
Refer to the Validation process area for more information about confirming that a product or product component fulfills its intended use when placed in its intended environment.
Refer to the Requirements Development process area for more information about the generation and development of customer, product, and product component requirements.
Refer to the Requirements Management process area for more information about managing requirements.
Specific Goal and Practice Summary
SG 1 Prepare for Verification
SP 1.1 Select Work Products for Verification
SP 1.2 Establish the Verification Environment
SP 1.3 Establish Verification Procedures and Criteria
SG 2 Perform Peer Reviews
SP 2.1 Prepare for Peer Reviews
SP 2.2 Conduct Peer Reviews
SP 2.3 Analyze Peer Review Data
SG 3 Verify Selected Work Products
SP 3.1 Perform Verification
SP 3.2 Analyze Verification Results