\section{Research Design} \label{sec:researchdesign} To answer the two research questions presented in the previous section, we designed an interview and two questionnaires with quantitative and qualitative questions addressed to project members. We also collect data from tools that supported the project management activities. \subsection{Surveys} We conducted after-project surveys divided into three target groups of project participants: \begin{enumerate} \item \textit{MPOG Staff:} two government-side employees who have acted directly in the platform development process. They were separately interviewed by videoconference using the Hangouts platform. The interviews took an average of 2 hours with 28 open questions divided by subject: Professional profile; Organization, communication and development methodologies in the context of government and project; Satisfaction with the developed platform; Lessons learned. \item \textit{UnB undegraduated students:} 42 undergraduate students who participated in any time of the project as developer and received scholarship. A questionnaire with 45 closed and six open questions was sent through emails using the Google Forms platform. The topics covered were: Organization, communication and development activities between the respondents and the different groups of the project; Learning acquired; Professional learning; Experience with FLOSS projects. We received a total of 37 responses. \item \textit{Senior Developers:} eight advanced level researchers, MSc students or IT market professionals who participated in some period of the project. A questionnaire with 29 closed questions and 10 open questions addressed the follow topics: Organization, communication and relationship between respondents and distinct groups of the project; Development process; Experience with Free Software. All eight recipients answered the questions. \end{enumerate} \subsection{Data Collection} In a second round, we also collect post-mortem data from Redmine (outside the SPB portal), Gitlab and Mailman (inside the SPB portal) - tools used for management, communication and code versioning during the 30-month project. The data of the tools provided by the SPB portal are open and available for access at any time. For Redmine, we use a backup and instantiate the tool on a server in UnB's research lab. The analysis of these data composes and ratifies the evidences obtained in the previous round (surveys). The information obtained represents, in terms of volume, interactions and the evolution of these interactions between the government and academia teams, and, in terms of development complexity, the platform size and quantity of software releases delivered. % And finally, we analized Colab code before and after the project to evaluate how much effort was spent to use this software as a component of the platform.