Business analysis is the practice of enabling change in an enterprise by defining needs and recommending solutions that deliver value to stakeholders.
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Business knowledge is required for the business analyst to perform effectively within their business, industry, organization, solution, and methodology.
Communication is the act of a sender conveying information to a receiver in a method which delivers the meaning the sender intended. Active listening skills help to deepen understanding and trust
Acceptance criteria are used to define the requirements, outcomes, or conditions that must be met in order for a solution to be considered acceptable to key stakeholders.
The Business Architecture Perspective highlights the unique characteristics of business analysis when practiced in the context of business architecture.
The Business Process Management Perspective highlights the unique characteristics of business analysis when practiced in the context of developing or improving business processes.
The aim of brainstorming is to produce numerous new ideas, and to derive from them themes for further analysis.
Business rules analysis is used to identify, express, validate, refine, and organize the rules that shape day-to-day business behaviour and guide operational business decision making.
Business rules analysis is used to identify, express, validate, refine, and organize the rules that shape day-to-day business behaviour and guide operational business decision making.
Estimation is used by business analysts and other stakeholders to forecast the cost and effort involved in pursuing a course of action.