Currently Browsing : practitioner experience

Recognition is important, but it’s not everything – Ryan Knapton 0

Posted on 8, June 2011

in Category practitioner experience

Recognition is important but its not everything

Is your BA style to go for glory? Do you seek praise around every bend? Do you want to be seen, heard and acknowledged? Do you vigorously voice your ideas and take all the credit? In today’s cutthroat business world I do not blame you if you do; often when one is at the project buffet it’s eat or be eaten. But I would like to argue that being a BA is about swallowing one’s pride – it’s about propping up your business and technical stakeholders, it’s about just being content with knowing that you helped make it all happen. Do [&hellip

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The link between stakeholder relationships and project planning – Nik Gebhard 0

Posted on 23, May 2011

in Category practitioner experience

The link between stakeholder relationships and project planning

During the past few days my curiosity-muscle has been tickled by the dormant value that resides in understanding stakeholder backgrounds early on in a project. Of particular interest is how this relates back to project timeline estimations and planning. “How?” you ask. Allow me to explain… I wouldn’t expect much “umming and ahhing” if I alleged that there was considerable value to be gained in building strong relationships with stakeholders. It seems almost logical that building robust connections brings with it not only commercial benefit, but also project benefit. It instills a sense of teamwork as opposed to the typical [&hellip

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Is email the business analyst’s friend or foe? – Ryan Knapton 0

Posted on 27, April 2011

in Category practitioner experience

Is email a BAs friend or foe

Picture this if you will: It’s a Monday morning after a long weekend where you took Friday off to get out of the city. You were consequently out of 3G coverage which resulted in no mobile phone reception, and therefore no email access. Back to Monday – you start your email application, and you have 113 unread emails. Do you: panic and hyperventilate, black spots start to appear in your peripheral vision, head straight to the kitchen, coffee will be your only saviour, knuckle down, and start going through the emails in the order you received them, or wish you [&hellip

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Technology: Choice or Chosen? – Emily McCreadie 0

Posted on 26, April 2011

in Category practitioner experience

Technology - Choice or chosen

Once upon a time a consulting firm bid for a high profile, fixed price project using Platform A. I realize that I have only started reading this fairytale story but how on earth has this bid included a technology choice when they are yet to do the analysis? The clients were delighted, as were the consulting firm when they won the > 15M contract. “And now for the real work to begin!” declared the (first) Project Manager. The Business Analysts swooped in and worked their magic on high-level design documentation and a long list of prioritized requirements. “Wonderful” declared both [&hellip

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Project sponsors: Saving face or saving costs? – Nik Gebhard 0

Posted on 21, April 2011

in Category practitioner experience

Project sponsors Saving face or saving costs

In today’s fast paced technology world it is common, if not mandatory, for financial institutions to replace legacy systems in order to gain competitive advantage. In my experience business stakeholders will often have decided on the technology before bringing an analyst or consultant on board. A lack of analysis from the onset means uninformed decisions and ultimately reputational risk if the wrong choice is made. Implementation projects that I have been involved in, have typically deferred the engaging of business analysts until project slippage has arisen. I’m not entirely sure whether this is a scapegoat tactic or a sincere attempt [&hellip

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Do workplace politics destroy Agile principles on documentation? – Ryan Knapton 0

Posted on 30, March 2011

in Category practitioner experience

Do workplace politics destroy Agile principles on documentation

Politics is a tricky business. When I think of a politician I am reminded of a cowboy trying to herd cattle – they know where they want to take everyone, it’s just rather hard to get everyone to go in their chosen direction. Blood, sweat and tears are involved in the dusty world of influencing people, and all too often, business analysts forget their cowboy hats at home. Human nature inherently means that we want to be heard and have our opinions counted. If our thoughts are not listened to, we tend to feign interest regardless of the outcome. Politicians [&hellip

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