Chapter - 9
Strategies for today’s business analyst: - For today’s changing
surroundings strategies are given to the business analyst to guide requirements
discovery.
1.
Balancing knowledge, activities, and people: -
In this, to produce optical value of business you should have full detail of
your work like – when to have reviews, when to involve stakeholders, so on.
This includes requirements knowledge, activities and people. Requirements
knowledge includes the product which are useful for work. In activities to
discover and communicate knowledge tasks and checkpoints are performed for
project. People are they who are there to help you to develop this business.
2.
Knowledge is needed before each breakout: - It
include the information or detail, requirements you need to have for your
project so that the desire project produce best results without any
restrictions. We should have enough knowledge for the project because of its breakout
conditions. Various breakout conditions are external and sequential.
3.
External strategy: - In this strategy, we use
solutions externally. In six activities are performed with breakout conditions
for the project that are conditions for the project that are conception,
scoping, work investigation, product determination, requirements definition and
construction. With these activities project develops successfully.
4.
Iterative strategy: - In these products are made
in a small series on a fix scale. It includes same activities as used in
external strategy. The knowledge you use for this project should be visible and
shareable so that people can see the result of any change and give response
quickly.
5.
Sequential strategy: - In this strategy activity
is completed before the beginning of next activity. Five breakdown condition
are performed for the completion of this project.
This chapter provides the strategies for Today's Business Analyst to guide them about the requirements discovery in today's changing environments. Strategy is a framework of Activities, Requirements Knowledge and People. The best way to discover the most suitable strategy for the project is to start with the generic profile most that looks like a current way of working and then make changes to accomplish the goals such as:
ReplyDelete1. Keep stakeholders involved by having frequent deliveries of artifacts, or working software.
2. Respond to business changes more quickly.
3. Make it easier for stakeholders to provide feedback.
4. Avoid producing deliverables that duplicate existing knowledge, or that provide little or no new knowledge.
Chapter 9 describes the strategies a Business Analyst uses in Business Requirements Gathering. As mentioned in the earlier comment, at the heart of strategy, are Activities, People and Requirements Knowledge. The chapter explains three key strategies to employ - External Strategy (where the product development is outsourced to an external supplier), Iterative Strategy (where each stage of the development process is built in small increments and reviewed for compliance with expectations/ purpose ) and Sequential Strategy(completing each stage prior to moving to the next phase).
ReplyDeleteThese strategies all have some similarities and activities that commence with conception through to construction. The Business Analyst must therefore decide, based on the project at hand, which strategy best fits the product/ business and make the necessary tweaks/adjustments when applying the most appropriate strategy.
EXTERNAL STRATEGY - Work Investigation to Building - This path is the most radical variation for this strategy: You have accumulated, and documented, sufficient knowledge of the business, and you pass that directly to the supplier with no further elaboration on your part. Your intention is either for the external supplier to design and implement a system to satisfy your business needs, or for the supplier to propose one or more of its products to satisfy as much as possible of your business needs.
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