Business Analysis Based on BABOK® Guide Version 2 - A Pocket Guide - Jarett Hailes - E-Book

Business Analysis Based on BABOK® Guide Version 2 - A Pocket Guide E-Book

Jarett Hailes

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Beschreibung

A Guide to the Business Analysis Body of Knowledge® (BABOK® Guide) is the collection of knowledge within the profession of business analysis and reflects current generally accepted practices. As with other professions, the body of knowledge is defined and enhanced by the business analysis professionals who apply it in their daily work role. The purpose of this pocket guide to the BABOK® Guide is to help understand the key knowledge found within the BABOK Guide and how it can be applied to a particular situation. Primary target groups for this pocket guide are: • Individuals interested in how business analysis works or who may want to become Business Analysts; • Business Analysts as a quick reference during the course of their day-to-day work; • Team members working on projects or within normal organizational operations where business analysis is performed; • Managers and executives who need to understand how business analysis can help improve their organizations. This pocket guide is based upon the content found in Version 2 of the BABOK Guide. The BABOK Guide was first published by the International Institute of Business Analysis (IIBA) in 2005. Version 2.0 was released in March 2009. The BABOK® Guide describes business analysis areas of knowledge, their associated activities and the tasks and skills necessary to be effective in their execution. The BABOK® Guide is a reference for professional knowledge for business analysis and provides the basis for the Certified Business Analysis Professional™ (CBAP®) and the Certification of Competency in Business Analysis™ (CCBA®) certifications.

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Business Analysis - Based on BABOK® Guide Version 2A Pocket Guide

Colophon

Title:

Business Analysis Based on BABOK® Guide Version 2 – A Pocket Guide

Series:

Best Practice

Author:

Jarett Hailes

Text editor:

Steve Newton

Publisher:

Van Haren Publishing, Zaltbommel,www.vanharen.net

ISBN Hard copy:

978 90 8753 735 7

ISBN eBook:

978 94 0180 537 7

Edition:

First edition, first impression, June 2014

Layout and typesetting:

CO2 Premedia, Amersfoort – NL

Copyright:

© Van Haren Publishing, 2014

For any further enquiries about Van Haren Publishing, please send an e-mail to: [email protected]

Trademark notices

IIBA®, the IIBA® logo, BABOK® Guide and Business Analysis Body of Knowledge® are registered trademarks owned by International Institute of Business Analysis. CBAP®, CCBA®, and the CBAP® and CCBA® logos are registered certification marks owned by International Institute of Business Analysis.

Certified Business Analysis Professional™, Endorsed Education Provider™, EEP™ and the EEP™ logo are trademarks owned by International Institute of Business Analysis.

Certification of Competency in Business Analysis™ is a trademark owned by International Institute of Business Analysis.

Although this publication has been composed with most care, author nor editor can accept any liability for damage caused by possible errors and/or incompleteness in this publication.

No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form by print, photo print, microfilm or any other means without written permission by the publisher.

“There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.”

- Peter Drucker

Understanding needs. Defining objectives. Prioritizing problems and opportunities. Selecting the right solution. Ensuring what is delivered is effective. All these activities and more rely on effective business analysis.

The profession of business analysis is rapidly changing and evolving. As organizations realize how crucial it is to be able to successfully manage and deliver change in order to survive and thrive in the global economy, demand for business analysis skills will continue to increase. To this day, people still have difficulty understanding the purpose of business analysis and how it fits with other professions that are involved in the same activities within organizations. In 2003 the International Institute of Business Analysis™ (IIBA®) was formed to define and develop standards for the profession and help business analysis practitioners (called Business Analysts) improve their skills.

The IIBA developed A Guide to the Business Analysis Body of Knowledge® (BABOK® Guide) to provide Business Analysts and other stakeholders a comprehensive understanding of what business analysis is about and how it can be delivered to help organizations meet their objectives. Version 2 of the BABOK® Guide was released in 2009 and helped shift the focus on business analysis from mainly within the Information Technology domain to one that enables all aspects of the organization to improve their performance and deliver solutions to meet their needs. The BABOK® Guide delivers a wealth of information about business analysis, but it can be difficult to know where to start or how to apply its content. Since the profession has evolved since the release of Version 2, there are certain aspects of business analysis that are under-represented in the current version of the BABOK® Guide. The purpose of this pocket guide is to provide a clear, concise summary of the key ideas from the BABOK® Guide while also offering additional competencies (competences), techniques and ways to apply business analysis within organizations.

Current Business Analysts can use this pocket guide as a quick reference to key concepts. Other stakeholders involved in business analysis activities, from C-suite executives to project team members to front-line staff, can use this guide to gain an understanding of the value business analysis has within an organization and how to effectively interact with Business Analysts.

As you review this pocket guide, I en courage you to think about your organization’s mission, goals, and objectives, as well as its current operations, and consider what its key success factors are going forward. From this starting point you can leverage the content from this pocket guide and the BABOK® Guide to ensure your organization focuses its energy on what truly matters and is able to successfully deliver solutions that meet its needs.

May 2014,

Jarett Hailes, CBAP

1   INTRODUCTION

1.1   Purpose of the Pocket Guide

1.2   What is Business Analysis?

1.3   The Need for Business Analysis

1.4   About IIBA

1.5   About the BABOK® Guide

1.6   Key Terms to Understand

1.7   Knowledge Areas, Techniques and Their Inter-Relationships

1.8   Stakeholders and Their Influence on Business Analysis

2   BUSINESS ANALYSIS PLANNING AND MONITORING

2.1   Plan Business Analysis Approach

2.2   Conduct Stakeholder Analysis

2.3   Plan Business Analysis Activities

2.4   Plan Business Analysis Communication

2.5   Plan Requirements Management Process

2.6   Manage Business Analysis Performance

3   ELICITATION

3.1   Prepare for Elicitation

3.2   Conduct Elicitation Activity

3.3   Document Elicitation Results

3.4   Confirm Elicitation Results

4   REQUIREMENTS MANAGEMENT AND COMMUNICATION

4.1   Manage Solution Scope and Requirements

4.2   Manage Requirements Traceability

4.3   Maintain Requirements for Re-Use

4.4   Prepare Requirements Package

4.5   Communicate Requirements

5   ENTERPRISE ANALYSIS

5.1   Define Business Need

5.2   Assess Capability Gaps

5.3   Determine Solution Approach

5.4   Define Solution Scope

5.5   Define Business Case

6   REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS

6.1   Prioritize Requirements

6.2   Organize Requirements

6.3   Specify and Model Requirements

6.4   Define Assumptions and Constraints

6.5   Verify Requirements

6.6   Validate Requirements

7   SOLUTION ASSESSMENT AND VALIDATION

7.1   Assess Proposed Solution

7.2   Allocate Requirements

7.3   Assess Organizational Readiness

7.4   Define Transition Requirements

7.5   Validate Solution

7.6   Evaluate Solution Performance

8   UNDERLYING COMPETENCIES

8.1   BABOK® Guide Underlying Competencies

8.2   Additional Competencies

8.3   Additional Behavioral Characteristics

8.4   Complementary Disciplines

9   TECHNIQUES

9.1   BABOK® Guide General Techniques

9.2   Other Techniques

10   APPLYING THE BABOK® GUIDE

10.1 Developing a Business Analysis Methodology

10.2 Business Analysis Maturity and Competency Models

10.3 Improving Business Analysis Practices

Appendix A Glossary

Appendix B References

1.1   Purpose of the Pocket Guide

The purpose of this pocket guide to the International Institute of Business Analysis™ (IIBA) A Guide to the Business Analysis Body of Knowledge® (or ‘BABOK® Guide’ for short) is to help understand the key knowledge found within the BABOK® Guide and how it can be applied to a particular situation. This pocket guide can be used by:

■   Individuals interested in how business analysis works or who may want to become Business Analysts;

■   Business Analysts as a quick reference during the course of their day-to-day work;

■   Team members working on projects or within normal organizational operations where business analysis is performed;

■   Managers and executives who need to understand how business analysis can help improve their organizations.

This pocket guide is based upon the content found in Version 2 of the BABOK® Guide, published in 20091.

Throughout this guide, you will see boxes that contain information of particular interest. Each box has one of the following symbols:

Note: defines a key concept or explains it in greater detail;

Example: a sample situation or description of a particular task is performed;

Tip: ways to help apply the BABOK® Guide in a meaningful way.

1.2   What is Business Analysis?

Business analysis as a profession is relatively young, but the core activities that encompass its value have been performed by a wide variety of individuals within modern organizations for quite some time.

Note: According to the BABOK® Guide “business analysis is the set of tasks and techniques used to work as a liaison among stakeholders in order to understand the structure, policies and operations of an organization, and recommend solutions that enable the organization to achieve its goals”.

Fundamentally, business analysis is about:

■   Understanding an organization’s core goals and objectives;

■   Being able to identify and assess key drivers that enable the organization to meet its goals and objectives;

■   Determining how an organization’s people, processes, structures and technologies work together as a system to perform their operations and how this ties to its goals and objectives;

■   Defining the needs of the organization based on its key drivers, goals and objectives as well as its current capabilities and future potential;

■   Evaluating potential solutions that will enable the organization to realize its goals and objectives.

As implied by the BABOK® Guide definition, business analysis is an enabling function that works with many groups of people who are involved directly and indirectly with an organization. Business analysis takes information from internal staff, customers, suppliers, partners, and vendors to develop a comprehensive understanding of the organization as it pertains to a particular problem or situation being analyzed (or the problem ‘domain’).

Note: For the purposes of the BABOK® Guide and this pocket guide, a Business Analyst is an individual who performs business analysis activities, regardless of what their formal job title is.

As a result, Business Analysts need to be able to comprehend and process information that will often be conveyed from many different perspectives. To successfully perform business analysis, a Business Analyst must be able to understand information from many different industries and professions, each of which have their own set of terminology, standards, cultures and perception of the organization. Business Analysts take information from all these sources, determine what is relevant and valuable, and then use that information to define the organization’s needs and assess potential solutions.

Example: Many Business Analysts help Information Technology solution providers understand the needs of their client, whether it is an external organization or the other departments within their own organization. In this setting, Business Analysts often develop materials that allow both parties to agree on what is needed and how the solution will meet those needs.

1.3   The Need for Business Analysis

Most modern organizations are comprised of the following people, processes and tools:

■   Executives focused on defining and achieving strategic goals and outcomes;

■   Front-line staff focused on executing their assigned tasks as efficiently as possible;

■   Managers focused on ensuring their teams meet or go beyond the expectations of their superiors;

■   Customers focused on their experience with the product or service they receive;

■   Suppliers and vendors focused on delivering what they need to in order to retain and increase their business with their client;

■   An array of information technology, communication, and other systems that help facilitate processes, knowledge management, and interaction with all the above stakeholders.

Each person and group within this collection has different viewpoints, skills, backgrounds and priorities that make it difficult for them to see how to effectively utilize the organization’s resources in order to solve problems and capitalize on opportunities:

■   Executives may be able to see the big picture but don’t have a deep understanding of the organization’s capabilities to decide which components should be leveraged for a particular initiative;

■   Front-line staff may not be empowered or realize how to make changes that will work towards the company’s strategic objectives, or have their own vision and priorities that compete with the executive view;

■   Managers are too busy putting out the daily fires to dedicate time to bridge the vision and priorities of their staff and superiors;

■   Suppliers, vendors and even different departments within the same organization are conversant in the language of their domains, but may not be able to effectively interpret how other stakeholders think and talk.

These problems are only exacerbated as organizations grow and/or are forced to adapt to changes in their industries.

Business analysis takes information from all of these people, groups, and tools to assess what the true needs of the organization are and find solutions that will effectively address those needs. It allows individuals and teams to get a holistic view of all relevant information related to a particular goal and helps facilitate the assessment and implementation of solutions that will achieve that goal.

Business analysis delivers value to organizations by:

   Focusing on needs that are paramount to the goals of the organization, which helps maximize the use of scarce resources to solve what truly needs solving;

   Enabling organizations to find the right solutions as efficiently as possible;

   Developing a performance framework that enables ongoing measurement, assessment and improvement of critical business functions and future opportunities.

1.4   About IIBA

IIBA® was formed in 2003 in Canada by 28 founding members2 who were dedicated to promoting the emerging profession of business analysis. The organization initially focused on the development of professional standards, certifications and a collective body of knowledge.

The organization has grown by leaps and bounds since then, and now has over 26,000 members around the world in 134 countries.

Today the organization has several key offerings that help aspiring and seasoned Business Analysts develop their skills, give employers the ability to assess and improve the performance of their Business Analysts, and build relationships with other professions and organizations to enhance the value Business Analysts can deliver.

These offerings include:

■   Support for chapters to develop and engage the local community of Business Analysts within a region;

■   Learning opportunities through regular webinars, newsletters and best practice articles;

■   Certification of education providers to deliver training that aligns with the BABOK® Guide;

■   Special interest groups focused on the use of business analysis within a particular industry;

■   Sponsorship of the multi-disciplined annual Building Business Capability conference that enables Business Analysts to gain insights into techniques, ideas and approaches that can improve their day-to-day activities.

Additionally, IIBA offers two levels of certification. These certifications help organizations understand a base level of knowledge that the certified individual possesses and provides individuals with recognition for their experience as Business Analysts. Both of these certifications require completion of an exam based on the BABOK® Guide content:

■