Petamaster

Loading

Software Engineering

A SMARTER APPROACH TO SOFTWARE ENGINEERING

Software Engineering is like home construction. Sometimes you need to remodel a room, others need a total makeover, or you may need a ground up build. Software engineering at SoftServe is defined by our innovative SMART START consultative approach. ​ SoftServe focuses on answering your company’s most critical questions first, allowing you to scale development as needed and providing exponentially faster lead time than other companies.

We define, implement, supervise, and monitor engineering software development standards, and develop innovative solutions in YOU-centric fashion—100% onsite, remote, or via hybrid delivery.

IT Personnel-R&D Software Engineering Temp

Software and Software Services

Software Engineering

Commissioning for Software Engineering

Software Maintenance for Order Development

Application Management Services;

IT Application Maintenance

IT Application Development

IT Product Training standard

IT Strat.-Consulting

The Application Management Lifecycle, as shown in Figure 1, consists of six logical and easy-to-understand phases:

  1. Define – the requirements for a new application are gathered, based on the business needs of the organization.
  2. Design – is the phase during which requirements are translated into specifications for the IT components that are required. Design includes the design of the application itself or of any customization to standard packaged software, and the design of the environment or operational model that the application has to run on.
  3. Build – both the application and the operational model are made ready for deployment. Application components are coded or acquired, integrated and tested. For purchased software, this will involve the actual purchase of the application, any required middleware and the related hardware and networking equipment. Any customization that is required will need to be done during this phase.
  4. Deploy – both the operational model and the application are deployed. The operational model is incorporated into the existing IT environment and the application is installed on top of the operational model, using the Release and Deployment Management process described in the ITIL Service Transition.
  5. Operate – the IT services organization operates the application as part of delivering a service required by the business. The performance of the application in relation to the overall service is measured continually against the Service Levels and key business drivers.
  6. Optimize – the results of the Service Level performance measurements are measured, analyzed and acted upon. Possible improvements are discussed and developments initiated if necessary. The two main strategies in this phase are to maintain and/or improve the Service Levels and to lower cost.