Foundations of Business Analysis Training with Michigan Technology Services
Michigan Technology Services offers instructor-led Foundations of Business Analysis training, as well as other Business Analysis courses, through a partnership with an International Institute of Business Analysis (IIBA®) Endorsed Education provider.
In a pre-Covid world our training would take place at our location in the Farmington Hills/Novi area, 20 miles outside of Detroit, or at your location anywhere around the world. Our Business Analysis workshops are now offered online/virtually, reducing your need to travel.
About this Course
Why do more than 50% of projects fail to meet their original objectives? Why do we continue to see the number of troubled and canceled projects on the rise? According to PMI’s Pulse of the Profession® In-Depth Report, 47% of failed projects fail to meet goals due to poor requirements management. With a strong correlation between poor requirements practices, failed projects, and wasted dollars, organizations can no longer afford to accept mediocre business analysis skills from those fulfilling the business analysis role.
This course provides students a clear understanding and total immersion into all of the facets of the business analyst role, including a thorough walkthrough of the various domain/knowledge areas that comprise the business analysis profession. Students are provided an opportunity to try their hand at several business analysis techniques for eliciting, analyzing, and modeling requirements. The business analysis work performed in strategy analysis and solution evaluation, which is most often the least familiar to business analysts, is thoroughly presented and explored. Students completing this course will be well equipped with new skills and knowledge that can be immediately applied on current and future projects.
This course is compliant with IIBA’s Business Analysis Body of Knowledge (BABOK® Guide) and is aligned with and upholds the practices as discussed in PMI’s Business Analysis for Practitioners: A Practice Guide
Our upcoming public Foundations of Business Analysis workshops are scheduled for Tuesday, January 21 – Friday, January 24, 2025, and, Monday, March 24 – Thursday, March 27, 2025. The course fee is $ 2,495/student. While we are located in Farmington Hills the Foundations of Business Analysis workshops will be instructor led, live online/virtual. Tentative date for June 10-13 as well.
Private classes for groups are available upon request. Onsite or online. Call 248-489-0408 for details.
For complete Business Analysis course outlines and pricing information on other Business Analysis Training classes or to request a class date contact Michigan Technology Services. 248-489-0408
Who Should Attend
This course is intended for beginner to intermediate business analysts who are looking to improve their skills by learning best practices and techniques for eliciting, analyzing, documenting, validating, and communicating requirements.
Course Objectives
After completing this course, students will be able to:
- Obtain a thorough understanding of the core responsibilities of the business analyst
- Understand the main professional associations and standards supporting business analysts in the industry
- Discuss and explore the components of each of the domains/knowledge areas that comprise the work of business analysis
- Recognize the importance of properly defining the business need prior to engaging in requirements activities
- Formulate a strong understanding of the concepts that comprise strategy analysis
- Obtain knowledge of and experience with the important work of stakeholder analysis
- Decipher between project and product scope and successfully use models to communicate scope
- Thoroughly understand and identify the various requirements categories and be able to recognize requirements of various types
- Develop interviewing skills and explore ways to plan and structure interviews
- Examine different forms of requirements documentation
- Explore elements of communication, conflict, and issue management
- Obtain a solid understanding of the concepts and activities involved in solution evaluation
- Obtain hands-on experience with a number of business analysis techniques for eliciting, analyzing, and modeling requirements
Course Outline
- What is Business Analysis?
- Benefiting from business analysis
- Business analysis and project success
- Challenges of business analysis
- Discussions:
- Who performs business analysis functions in your organization?
- Exploring solutions options
- Your biggest challenges on past projects
- Definition of business analyst
- Responsibilities of a business analyst
- The BA/PM roles
- IIBA/PMI and the goals of a professional association
- Purpose for having a BA standard
- IIBA’s BABOK® Guide and PMI’s Practice Guide in Business Analysis
- Business analysis core concepts
- Business analysis perspectives
- IIBA and PMI certifications for business analysts
- Workshop: Introduction to Case Study
- Define Strategy Analysis
- When to perform Strategy Analysis
- Business models
- Defining the business need
- Root cause analysis
- 5 Whys
- Fishbone diagram
- Defining business requirements
- Discussions:
- Who is involved in strategy analysis in your organization?
Workshops:
- Create a Business Model
- Define the Business Need
- Create a Fishbone Diagram
- Write Business Requirements
- Define change strategy
- Gap analysis
- Determining solution options
- Enterprise readiness
- Cultural fit
- Operational and functional analysis
- Impact analysis
- Transitioning to the future state
- What is a stakeholder?
- The importance of stakeholder analysis
- Stakeholder identification
- Stakeholder types
- Tips/techniques for identifying analyzing stakeholders
- Keeping track of stakeholders
- Workshop: Identify Stakeholders
- Defining solution scope
- Techniques to use
- Project scope versus product scope
- Finding solution boundaries
- What is a feature?
- Identifying key features
- Discussion: Identifying Solution Scope
- Workshops:
- Draw a Context Diagram
- Defining Scope with Features
- What is a requirement (IEEE and IIBA definitions)
- Project roles involved in requirements activities
- Requirements types
- Assumptions and constraints
- Business rules
- Decision tables and inference rules
- Requirements vs. business rules
- Requirements vs. specifications
- Discussions:
- Requirements
- Business rules
- Workshops:
- Define a Business Rule
- Write Requirements
- Why do we model processes?
- What is Business Process Management?
- Using a modeling notation
- “As Is” vs. “To Be” modeling
- Why use BPMN?
- Basic BPM notation
- Developing a business process model
- Using a facilitated session
- Business Process Modeling – A case study
- Developing a Business Process Model
- Workshop: Create a Business Process Model
- Types of elicitation techniques
- Interviewing – what and why?
- Preparing for an effective interview
- Selecting the right interviewees
- Types of questions to ask
- Sequencing of questions
- Discussion: Elicitation Techniques You Have Used
- Workshop: Planning for an Interview
- Conduct the Interview
- Establishing rapport with stakeholders
- Active listening and listening styles
- Workshops and getting the right people
- The role of the facilitator
- The brainstorming technique
- Decision rules and reaching consensus
- Avoiding Groupthink
- Encouraging participation
- Managing meetings and conflict
- Workshop: Conduct an Interview
- Defining requirements analysis
- Prioritizing requirements (MoSCoW, Timeboxing, Voting, etc.)
- Documenting requirements
- Other uses for specifications and models
- Unified Modeling Language (UML®)
- Explaining user stories
- The traceability matrix
- Communicating requirements
- Workshop:
- Analyzing Requirements
- Identifying User Stories
- Tracing Requirements
- Obtaining Approval
- What is an actor?
- Types of actors
- Defining actors
- Locating use cases
- Use case diagrams
- Use case tips
- Defining and identifying scenarios
- Parts of a use case
- Defining primary, secondary actors and pre and post conditions
- Best practices for writing use cases
- Template: Use Case Specification
Workshop:
- Drawing a Use Case Diagram
- Write the Main Success Scenario
- Scenarios and flows
- Alternate and exception flows
- Alternate scenario post conditions
- Guidelines for Alternate flows
- Examples of alternate and exception flows
- Workshop: Writing Alternate and Exception Flows
- How requirements relate to use cases
- Writing Non-Functional requirements
- User Interface Requirements
- Reporting requirements
- Data requirements
- Data accessibility requirements
- Business requirements document (BRD)
- BRD vs the Functional Requirements
- Verifying Requirements
- Quality attributes
- Purpose of the requirements package
- BA Deliverables across knowledge areas/domains
- Planning BA deliverables
- Workshops:
- Develop a User Interface
- Verifying Requirements
- Business analysis communication
- The business analyst’s role in communication
- Forms of communication
- 7Cs of communication
- Symptoms of information overload
- Information mapping
- Presentation and common elements
- Requirements walkthroughs
- Conflict and issue management
- Conflict resolution techniques
- Understanding solution evaluation
- Verification vs. validation
- Timing of solution evaluation
- Planning solution evaluation
- Performing solution evaluation
- Using existing metrics
- Evaluating long term performance
- Qualitative vs. Quantitative measures
- Tools and techniques used in solution evaluation
- Comparing expected vs. actuals
- When variances occur
- Proposing recommendations to address variances
- Communicating evaluation results
- Helpful links for obtaining additional business analysis information