The Design Science Research Grid: Difference between revisions

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[[image:DSR Grid.png|300px|thumb|The Design Science Research Grid]]The DSR Grid  <ref>vom Brocke, J., and Maedche, A. 2019. “The DSR Grid: Six Core Dimensions for Effectively Planning and Communicating Design Science Research Projects,” Electronic Markets (29). (https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-019-00358-7).</ref>  empowers researchers to successfully plan, coordinate and communicate their DSR projects. The DSR grid intends to put a complete DSR project on one page, highlighting its fundamental components in arrange to reflect and communicate its scope. Such representation of a DSR project helps to arrange and communicate a DSR project as well as to get input from diverse partners in an early stage and to question and update the scope as the project advances. The DSR Grid consists of the six main dimensions of a DSR venture.
[[image:DSR Grid.png|300px|thumb|The Design Science Research Grid]]
 
The DSR Grid  <ref>vom Brocke, J., and Maedche, A. 2019. “The DSR Grid: Six Core Dimensions for Effectively Planning and Communicating Design Science Research Projects,” Electronic Markets (29). (https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-019-00358-7).</ref>  empowers researchers to successfully plan, coordinate and communicate their DSR projects. The DSR grid intends to put a complete DSR project on one page, highlighting its fundamental components in arrange to reflect and communicate its scope. Such representation of a DSR project helps to arrange and communicate a DSR project as well as to get input from diverse partners in an early stage and to question and update the scope as the project advances. The DSR Grid consists of the six main dimensions of a DSR venture.
== Problem Description ==
== Problem Description ==
What is the problem for which a DSR project aims to deliver a possible solution? Problems ought to be defined by means of problem articulations and characterized by positioning the problem in a problem space. Previous research has identified the context, described by the domain, the stakeholder, time and place, and goodness criteria<ref>vom Brocke, J., Winter, R., Hevner, A., and Maedche, A. 2020. “Accumulation and Evolution of Design Knowledge in Design Science Research - A Journey Through Time and Space,” Journal of the Association for Information Systems (21), pp. 520–544. (https://doi.org/10.17705/1jais.00611).</ref>;
What is the problem for which a DSR project aims to deliver a possible solution? Problems ought to be defined by means of problem articulations and characterized by positioning the problem in a problem space. Previous research has identified the context, described by the domain, the stakeholder, time and place, and goodness criteria <ref>vom Brocke, J., Winter, R., Hevner, A., and Maedche, A. 2020. “Accumulation and Evolution of Design Knowledge in Design Science Research - A Journey Through Time and Space,” Journal of the Association for Information Systems (21), pp. 520–544. (https://doi.org/10.17705/1jais.00611).</ref> .
== References ==

Revision as of 17:08, 8 November 2022

The Design Science Research Grid

The DSR Grid [1] empowers researchers to successfully plan, coordinate and communicate their DSR projects. The DSR grid intends to put a complete DSR project on one page, highlighting its fundamental components in arrange to reflect and communicate its scope. Such representation of a DSR project helps to arrange and communicate a DSR project as well as to get input from diverse partners in an early stage and to question and update the scope as the project advances. The DSR Grid consists of the six main dimensions of a DSR venture.

Problem Description

What is the problem for which a DSR project aims to deliver a possible solution? Problems ought to be defined by means of problem articulations and characterized by positioning the problem in a problem space. Previous research has identified the context, described by the domain, the stakeholder, time and place, and goodness criteria [2] .

References

  1. vom Brocke, J., and Maedche, A. 2019. “The DSR Grid: Six Core Dimensions for Effectively Planning and Communicating Design Science Research Projects,” Electronic Markets (29). (https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-019-00358-7).
  2. vom Brocke, J., Winter, R., Hevner, A., and Maedche, A. 2020. “Accumulation and Evolution of Design Knowledge in Design Science Research - A Journey Through Time and Space,” Journal of the Association for Information Systems (21), pp. 520–544. (https://doi.org/10.17705/1jais.00611).