Work‐from‐home impacts on software project: A global study on software development practices and stakeholder perceptions

Author:

Nguyen‐Duc Anh1ORCID,Khanna Dron2ORCID,Le Giang Huong3,Greer Des4ORCID,Wang Xiaofeng2,Zaina Luciana Martinez5,Matturro Gerardo6,Melegati Jorge2,Guerra Eduardo2,Kettunen Petri7,Hyrynsalmi Sami8,Edison Henry9,Sales Afonso10ORCID,Chanin Rafael10ORCID,Rutitis Didzis11,Kemell Kai‐Kristian7,Aldaeej Abdullah12,Mikkonen Tommi13,Garbajosa Juan14,Abrahamsson Pekka15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computer Science Norwegian University of Science and Technology Trondheim Norway

2. Faculty of Computer Science Free University of Bozen‐Bolzano Bolzano Italy

3. Faculty of Social Sciences Oslo Metropolitan University Oslo Norway

4. School of Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Queenś University Belfast Belfast Northern Ireland

5. Department of Computing Universidade Federal de São Carlos São Carlos Brazil

6. Department of Software Engineering Universidad ORT Uruguay Montevideo Uruguay

7. Department of Computer Science University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

8. Software Engineering Department University in Lappeenranta Lappeenranta Finland

9. Department of Software Engineering Blekinge Institute of Technology Karlskrona Sweden

10. School of Technology Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

11. School of Business and Finance BA School of Business and Finance Riga Latvia

12. Department of Management Information Systems Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University Dammam Saudi Arabia

13. Faculty of Information Technology University of Jyväskylä Jyväskylä Finland

14. Computer Systems Engineering School (ETSISI) Universidad Politécnica de Madrid Madrid Spain

15. Faculty of Information Technology and Communication Sciences Tampere University Tampere Finland

Abstract

ContextThe COVID‐19 pandemic has had a disruptive impact on how people work and collaborate across all global economic sectors, including software business. While remote working is not new for software engineers, forced WFH situations come with both limitations and opportunities. As the ‘new normal’ for working might be based on the current state of Work‐from‐home (WFH), it is useful to understand what has happened and learn from that.ObjectiveThis study aims to gain insights into how their WFH arrangement impacts project management and software engineering. We are also interested in exploring these impacts in different contexts, such as startups and established companies.MethodWe conducted a global‐scale, cross‐sectional survey during the spring and summer 2021. Our results are based on quantitative and qualitative analysis of 297 valid responses.ResultsWe characterize the profile of WFH in both spatial and temporal aspects, together with a set of common collaborative tools and coordination and control mechanisms. We revealed some areas of project management that are relatively more challenging during WFH situations, such as coordination, communication and project planning. We also revealed a mixed picture of the perceived impact of WFH on different software engineering activities.ConclusionWFH is a situational phenomenon which can have both negative and positive impact on software teams. For practitioners, we suggest a unified approach to consider the context of WFH, collaborative tools, associated coordination and control approaches and a process that resolve those aspects that are sensitive to physical interaction.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Software

Reference69 articles.

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