“…Situation factors (Harmsen, Lubbers, & Wijers, 1995) Environment: management commitment, resources; Project Method implementation: Size of project team, capability of project team Projects: Innovation level, Clarity of project goal, complexity of project Project Characteristics (Harmsen, Lubbers, & Wijers, 1995) Team size Domain Characteristics etc. Project Environment (Harmsen, 1997) Existing information infrastructure, the users, the method implementational culture of both the supplier method implementation and the customer method implementation Project Characterization based on Project or contingency factors (Harmsen, 1997) Examples of project or contingency factors are Application/ domain characteristics, external factors, technical factors, and the available development expertise Situation Factors (Harmsen, 1997) Environment: management commitment, importance of the information system, impact of the information system, amount of resistance and conflict, scarcity of available resources, stability and formality of the environment, knowledge and experience of the users Project method implementation: skill of the project team, size of the project team, quality of information planning, interfaces with other projects and systems, dependency on other projects and parties Project: clarity and stability of project goal, quality of the specifications, size of the (Börner, Goeken, Kohlborn, & Korthaus, 2011) After (Börner, 2010) Compliance: general laws, industry-specific, regulations, internal policies IT department: existent, not existent Interaction: customer interaction, employee interaction our notion of functional method, introduce the functional method meta-model and postulate the attributes of a functional situation. The operations required to perform matching with the functional situation are also considered.…”