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Type

Area

Name
Organizational modeling

Definition
is used during requirements analysis to describe the organizational units, the stakeholders,
and the relationships between them. This allows you the opportunity to structure your project
requirements based upon the needs of each stakeholder group.

Process modeling

Models organize your requirements using a hierarchy of processes and subprocesses and
addressing those processes from start to finish./Process modeling is the activity of
representing processes of an enterprise, so that the current process may be analyzed and
improved in future. It allows the requirements to be organized around the related processes.
Processes are also considered to have sub-processes, inputs, and outputs.

RACI Charts

A RACI chart is a roles and responsibilities chart, not a requirement documentation technique.
RACI means responsible, accountable, consult, and inform for project activities, not
requirement.

Creative thinking
The opportunity cost

is to create invative new ideas


The opportunity cost is the total value of the opportunity that can be taken advantage of.

nterprise analysis

Enterprise Analysis focuses on identifying the business needs that drive a project and defining
a feasible solution scope that can be implemented by the business. This knowledge area
includes developing the business requirements for a project that define the high-level goals,
objectives, and needs of the organization, and the high-level business functionality needed in
the resulting solution

The change-driven approach

The change-driven approach favors defining requirements through team interaction.


The change-driven approach looks to create business value in short iterations. The downside
of this approach, however, is that there is more risk and uncertainty in the overall direction.
The change-driven approach relies on team interaction to define requirements and gather
feedback on the solution.

Plan-driven business analysis Plan-driven business analysis tries to minimize your up-front uncertainty (or risk) and
maximize your control over the business analysis activities on your project. This is a more
traditional style of development, such as the waterfall model of software development or what
you find in straightforward business process reengineering initiatives.
risk Transference (outsource) transferring the risk to a third party. This doesn't reduce or eliminate the risk, but transfers the
ownership of the risk event.
risk Mitigation

Mitigation is a risk response to reduce the probability or impact of the risk event. In this
example, the training reduces the probability of errors.

Type

Area

Name
risk Acceptance

Definition
Acceptance is the only risk response that can be used for both positive and negative risk
events. For example, you might use acceptance when you have identified a small risk event
that has little probability and/or little impact on the project objectives.

risk Avoidance

Avoidance is evident when the risk is entirely avoided or removed from the requirements.

risk

They will accept high risks if there are also high rewards.Risk-seeking organizations look for
high-risk events, such as entrepreneurial organizations, as long as the high-risks also have a
high reward for the risk event accepted.

All in approach to timeboxing The business analyst will implement each requirement that is being prioritized. Start with all
requirements
eligible requirements in the hypothetical box (project) and then remove them one-by-one,
based on how you plan to meet the schedule dates or budget limit.This answer reflects the
approach considering all project requirements, but removing them one by one until the
maximum time and budget have been satisfied.
Analogous estimation

This is an example of an analogous estimating approach. It uses a similar project to create an


analogy of what the current project's duration will be.

the three-point estimate

is an average, for the project. This approach takes the average of the optimistic, pessimistic,
and most likely to predict the duration.

Assumption analysis

Assumption analysis is done in order to test the accuracy of assumptions made in the project.
It may generate one or more risks once an assumption proves to be false.

Requirements analysis tools


and techniques

Requirements analysis tools and techniques are used to develop the stakeholder and solution
requirements. The Requirements Analysis knowledge area focuses on analyzing the stated
requirements from the elicitation efforts and building the real stakeholder or solution
requirements for the project.

Validate requirements

Validating requirements make sure that the requirements support the business requirements
and the business objectives for the project. In order to be valid, the requirements should
contribute directly or indirectly to the business case. Requirements validation is ongoing
across the project life cycle; it helps in ensuring that each level of detail a user adds to his/her
requirements aligns with the big picture.

Consistent requirements

Consistent requirements do not contradict or conflict with one another. Here in this statement,
it is stated that requirements describe the same feature but produce different results;
therefore, these requirements are termed as not consistent.

data flow diagrams

Data flow diagrams permit a user to organize his/her requirements based on how information
or data flows through the system.

Type

Area

Name
Timeboxing

Definition
Timeboxing describes the amount of work that the project team is capable of completing in a
set period of time.

Requirement analysis

Requirements analysis obtains elicited information and makes sense of this information. The
tasks involved in the Requirements Analysis knowledge area focus on analyzing the stated
requirements from the elicitation efforts and building the real stakeholder or solution
requirements for the project. The project stakeholder states requirements during requirements
elicitation. When the structured and collaborative requirements analysis efforts are
completed, the needs of stakeholders are defined by the real requirements

Assumptions
Assumptions are things that are thought to be true, but not proven to be true.
constraints
A constraint is a must have - such as a deadline or a maximum budget.
The Gane/Sarson data model The Gane/Sarson method identifies each node of the model and defines each component
either in plain text or pseudocode.
Process

A process is defined as a sequence of repeatable activities executed in an organization.

ERD Entity

In an entity-relationship diagram, entities are the things about which data is needed. Entities
are represented in the labeled rectangle of the diagram

Requirements management
plan

Requirements management plan defines the process that will be used to prioritize
requirements during requirements analysis. It is built as a part of the business analysis
planning and monitoring knowledge.

Modifiable requirements

Modifiable requirements are the requirements that are logically structured in a related group
and can be changed. Related solution requirements must be grouped together in order for the
requirements to be modifiable.

Scope modeling

Scope modeling organizes requirements based on the solution components to which they are
related. Scope models are used to describe the scope of analysis or the scope of a solution. It
serves up as a basis to define and delimit the scope of business analysis and project work.

Baseline

A baseline is a view of the reviewed and agreed-upon requirements at a particular point in


time. It acts as a snapshot of the status and state of a project deliverable at a particular point
in time.

Project manager

A project manager focuses on the deliverables that need to be part of the project plan so they
can be tracked as milestones.

Approved requirements

The approved requirement is a subset of a specific requirements document, one or more


graphical models, or a completed requirements document. Approved requirements are used in
consequent business analysis or implementation efforts on the project.

Business rules analysis

Business rules analysis identifies changes in the policies that guide the organization towards
achieving its goals and objectives.

Type

Area

Name
Business need

Definition
The business need defines the issues for which the business analyst is trying to find a
solution. He should look at the business drivers and issues to determine if a change is
required. The business analyst works as the master investigator, and verifies the business
needs to ensure that the problems or opportunities are properly addressed.

The solution approach

The solution approach defines the methodology or development life cycle used to deliver the
solution components. The business analyst is responsible for defining the solution approach.

Document analysis

Document analysis is used to elicit, confirm, and random check project requirements
information by studying current documentation and other relevant information. These
resources of information allow the business analyst to collect details of current solutions to
observe whether they include usable components or should be changed for the proposed new
solution.

The Solution Assessment and The Solution Assessment and Validation knowledge area ensures that the solution can be
Validation knowledge area
successfully implemented within the organization to achieve the business need that drives the
project. The business analyst should have knowledge of the business environment and be able
to assess how each of the project's proposed solutions affects that environment. He is also
responsible for communicating solution requirements and implementation-specific information
to the stakeholders.

Force field analysis

Force field analysis is a technique related with assessing organizational change readiness
relative to deploying a new solution. It helps in evaluating the pros and cons of each
significant change according to the solution. Force field analysis graphically describes the
positive and negative forces that support or oppose a specific change. It includes the following
steps: Identify the forces that are for or against the change; Depict the forces on each side of
the line; Estimate the strength of each force.

Solution validation
assessment

The solution validation assessment defines whether the constructed solution achieves the
business and project requirements at an acceptable level of quality.

Expert judgment

Expert judgment evaluates and builds the optimal business analysis approach for the project.
The team will rely on individuals or groups with specialized knowledge or skills in business
analysis and other aspects of the domain in order to assist in defining the approach.

Type

Area

Name
Business Analysis Planning
and Monitoring

Definition
The Requirements Management plan that is built as part of the Business Analysis Planning and
Monitoring knowledge area defines the project's approach to traceability. Business Analysis
Planning and Monitoring helps in defining the tasks related with the planning and monitoring
of business analysis activities, and with the monitoring and reporting on work executed to
ensure that the business analysis effort generates the outcomes which meet stakeholder
expectations and needs.

technique

assess organizational
readiness

Criteria definition

The criteria definition is a tool and technique of assess organizational readiness, not an input
to the task

technique

assess proposed
solution process

Decision analysis

Decision analysis is a tool and technique that is used to assess proposed solution process. It
allows measuring and comparing the probabilities of each identified solution result. This tool
helps rank the identified solution.Good job, please continue to the

technique

assessing an external
vendor's

Vendor assessment

Vendor assessment allows to assess an external vendor's ability in order to provide all or part
of the solution. It helps in ensuring that the vendors are reliable and they can meet the
expectations.

Definition

solution validation
assessment

solution validation
assessment

The solution validation assessment determines the solution's ability to meet the business
need at an acceptable level of quality.Good job, please continue to the next question.

activities

Solution assessment
and validation

Solution assessment and


validation

You will complete six activities, they are: 1-Assessing the proposed solution,2-Allocating
requirements,3-Assessing organizational readiness,4-Defining transition requirements,5Validating the solution,6-Evaluating solution performance

Front loading the project with Front loading the project with the riskiest requirements allows the requirements with the most
the riskiest requirements
risks the chance to fail before much time or money has been invested in the project work.
allows
Business analysis
planning and
monitoring

Business analysis planning


and monitoring

Business analysis planning and monitoring helps in defining the tasks related with the
planning and monitoring of business analysis activities, and with the monitoring and reporting
on work executed to ensure that the business analysis effort generates the outcomes which
meet stakeholder expectations and needs.

business analysis
approach

Change-driven

The change-driven approach looks to create business value in short iterations. The downside
of this approach, however, is that there is more risk and uncertainty in the overall direction.
The change-driven approach relies on team interaction to define requirements and gather
feedback on the solution.

Type
activities

Area
document analysis

Name
document analysis

Definition
To conduct document analysis, you step through three stages: preparation, review, and wrapup. Preparation involves locating and evaluating the documents that are relevant to your
planned elicitation activity. Document review has you studying those materials, identifying
any relevant details, and documenting those details along with any questions you might have.
Wrap-up allows you to get the answers to any questions you might have and confirm what you
have discovered with your stakeholders.

Definition

document analysis

Preparation

Preparation involves locating and evaluating the documents that are relevant to your planned
elicitation activity

Definition

document analysis

Document review

studying the materials, identifying any relevant details, and documenting those details along
with any questions you might have

Definition

document analysis

Wrap-up

Wrap-up allows you to get the answers to any questions you might have and confirm what you
have discovered with your stakeholders

Solution Approach

Defines the general approach that will be taken to create or acquire new capabilities required
to meet the business need.The solution approach is a definition of the general approach the
project should take to solve the identified problem or capture an opportunity.

enterprise analysis

Solution approach The business case, the business need, The required capabilities, And the
solution scope.

Definition

activities

enterprise analysis

Definition

assessment of capability gap It identifies new capabilities required by the organization to meet the business need.The
assessment of capability gaps is a business analysis task to identify new capabilities required
in order to meet the business need.

Definition

regulatory ranking

prioritizing the requirements based on the requirements that must be implemented based on
the regulatory demands.

Definition

Business constraint

A time limit, budget limit, limit on the number of resources, and other organizational
restrictions are business constraints.

Definition

Scoring system

A scoring system can be used to assign a weight of value to the characteristics of each
identified solution. Each solution is scored and the top-rated solutions are then investigated in
greater detail.

Definition

Decision analysis

The decision analysis approach considers the available methodologies to make a


determination of which of these techniques suits the type of project, solution, or opportunity
that the business analyst is working with.

Definition

User classes, profiles, or roles User classes, profiles, or roles are the modeling techniques that show how the users will
interact with the solution. The different types of users, profiles, and their work and
interactions with the solution are studied.

Type
Definition

Name
RACI Charts

Definition
It's a matrix that uses the Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed tasks as part of
the stakeholder analysis process.The RACI chart is a matrix that can be used throughout the
business analysis duties. It uses the legend of Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and
Informed to identify how the stakeholders interact with the business analysis duties.

Definition

Quality control

Quality control is a project management process that inspects the project deliverables for
quality. Its goal is to identify defects so that corrective actions may be implemented.

Definition

Coverage matrix

A coverage matrix is a table used to manage tracing. It is ideal for smaller projects where
there are few requirements to trace. It's also ideal for when only the high-level requirements
need to be traced.

enterprise analysis

Enterprise analysis is primarily concerned with analyzing the business situation in order to
fully understand business problems and opportunities. It's a business analysis process that
identifies the problem, need, or opportunity and justifies the investment necessary to rectify
the problem or seize the opportunity.

Definition

SMART

SMART is a goal-assessment approach that examines each goal using the letters in SMART for
an analysis: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bounded.

Definition

business goals and


objectives

They describe the ends that the organization is seeking to achieve.Business goals and
objectives clearly define the ends that the organization is seeking to achieve.

Definition

Rough order of magnitude


cost estimating

The initial cost estimate is called the rough order of magnitude cost estimate. It is a high-level
cost estimate that is fast to create but somewhat unreliable.

activities

business case

business need, the assumptions and constraints, the stakeholder concerns, and the solution
scope

activities

solution scope

The solution scope should identify several components in addition to the technical
dependencies: features and functions, interactions with people and systems, involved
business units, affected business processes, process owners, IT systems, and any other
technology that may be affected by the solution

Definition

Vision statement

The vision statement, sometimes called a problem statement, defines the problem, the
affected stakeholders of the problem, the impact of the solution for the stakeholder, and any
relevant key benefits the solution will create.

Definition

Management horizon

is a term to describe the break-even point of the solution. Once a solution breaks even on
costs, then it begins to generate a profit for the organization.

Definition
Definition

Results measurements
requirements management
plan

Management is asking you to include a method for results measurement.


The requirements management plan defines the process for prioritizing requirements.

Definition

domain

is the area undergoing analysis.

Definition

Area

enterprise analysis

Type
Definition

Area

Name
solution

Definition
is a set of changes to the current state of an organization that are made in order to enable
that organization to meet a business need, solve a problem, or take advantage of an
opportunity

Definition

Business Requirements

are higher-level statements of the goals, objectives, or needs of the enterprise. They describe
the reasons why a project has been initiated

Definition

Stakeholder Requirements

statements of the needs of a particular stakeholder or class of stakeholders. They describe the
needs that a given stakeholder has and how that stakeholder will interact with a solution.

Definition

Solution Requirements

describe the characteristics of a solution that meet business requirements and stakeholder
requirements.

Definition

Functional Requirements

describe the behavior and information that the solution will manage. They describe
capabilities the system will be able to perform in terms of behaviors or operationsspecific
information technology application actions or responses.

Definition

Non-functional Requirements capture conditions that do not directly relate to the behavior or functionality of the solution,
but rather describe environmental conditions under which the solution must remain effective
or qualities that the systems must have.

Definition

Transition Requirements

describe capabilities that the solution must have in order to facilitate transition from the
current state of the enterprise to a desired future state, but that will not be needed once that
transition is complete.

Definition

Business Analysis
Business Analysis Planning
Planning and Monitoring and Monitoring

covers how business analysts determine which activities are necessary in order to complete a
business analysis effort. It covers identification of stakeholders, selection of business analysis
techniques, the process that will be used to manage requirements, and how to assess the
progress of the work. The tasks in this knowledge area govern the performance of all other
business analysis tasks.

Definition

Elicitation

Elicitation

describes how business analysts work with stakeholders to identify and understand their
needs and concerns, and understand the environment in which they work. The purpose of
elicitation is to ensure that a stakeholders actual underlying needs are understood, rather
than their stated or superficial desires

Definition

Requirements
Management and
Communication

Requirements Management
and Communication

describes how business analysts manage conflicts, issues and changes in order to ensure that
stakeholders and the project team remain in agreement on the solution scope, how
requirements are communicated to stakeholders, and how knowledge gained by the business
analyst is maintained for future use.

Definition

Enterprise Analysis

Enterprise Analysis

describes how business analysts identify a business need, refine and clarify the definition of
that need, and define a solution scope that can feasibly be implemented by the business. This
knowledge area describes problem definition and analysis, business case development,
feasibility studies, and the definition of solution scope.

Type
Definition

Area
Requirements Analysis

Name
Requirements Analysis

Definition
describes how business analysts prioritize and progressively elaborate stakeholder and
solution requirements in order to enable the project team to implement a solution that will
meet the needs of the sponsoring organization and stakeholders. It involves analyzing
stakeholder needs to define solutions that meet those needs, assessing the current state of
the business to identify and recommend improvements, and the verification and validation of
the resulting requirements.

Definition

Solution Assessment
and Validation

Solution Assessment and


Validation

describes how business analysts assess proposed solutions to determine which solution best
fits the business need, identify gaps and shortcomings in solutions, and determine necessary
workarounds or changes to the solution. It also describes how business analysts assess
deployed solutions to see how well they met the original need so that the sponsoring
organization can assess the performance and effectiveness of the solution.

Definition

Underlying
Competencies

Underlying Competencies

describes the behaviors, knowledge, and other characteristics that support the effective
performance of business analysis

Definition

task

A task is an essential piece of work that must be performed as part of business analysis.

Definition

input
output

represents the information and preconditions necessary for a task to begin.


An output is a necessary result of the work described in the task. Outputs are created,
transformed or change state as a result of the successful completion of a task. Although a
particular output is created and maintained by a single task, a task can have multiple outputs.

Definition

Classification Requirements
[State or States].

define what type of requrment is this business,enterprise,stakeholder and define the state fo
that requirment. If no classification or states are listed, any or all requirements may be used
as an input or output

Definition

Stakeholders

Each task includes a listing of generic stakeholders who are likely to participate in the
execution of that task or who will be affected by it.

Definition

Stakeholders

business analyst

stakeholder in all business analysis activities.is responsible and accountable for the execution
of these activities. In some cases, the business analyst may also be responsible for the
performance of activities that fall under another stakeholder role.

Definition

Stakeholders

customer

is a stakeholder outside the boundary of a given organization or organizational unit.


Customers make use of products or services produced by the organization and may have
contractual or moral rights that the organization is obliged to meet.

Definition

Stakeholders

domain subject matter expert is any individual with in-depth knowledge of a topic relevant to the business need or solution
(SME)
scope. This role is often filled by people who will also be end users or people who will be
indirect users of the solution

Definition

Stakeholders

End users

are stakeholders who will directly interact with the solution. The term is most frequently used
in a software development context

Type
Definition

Area
Stakeholders

Name
Implementation domain
subject matter expert (SME)

Definition
responsible for designing and implementing potential solutions. The implementation subject
matter experts will provide specialist expertise on the design and construction of the solution
components that fall outside the scope of business analysis.

Definition

Stakeholders

Organizational Change
Management Professionals

are responsible for facilitating acceptance and adoption of new solutions and overcoming
resistance to change. Areas of expertise among change management professionals include
industry and cultural expertise. Good change management can help to create advocates for
change within an organization.

Definition

Stakeholders

System Architects

are responsible for dividing a software application into components and defining the
interactions between them. Areas of expertise among system architects include
understanding of methodologies and of solutions offered by specific vendorsGood system
architecture will facilitate rapid development of solutions and reuse of components in other
solutions.

Definition

Stakeholders

Trainers

Trainers are responsible for ensuring that the end users of a solution understand how it is
supposed to work and are able to use it effectively. Areas of expertise among trainers may
include classroom-based or online education

Definition

Stakeholders

Usability Professionals

Usability professionals are responsible for the external interaction design of technology
solutions and for making those solutions as simple to use as is feasible. Areas of expertise
among usability professionals include user interface designers and information architects

Definition

Stakeholders

Project managers

are responsible for managing the work required to deliver a solution that meets a business
need, and for ensuring that the projects objectives are met while balancing the project
constraints, including scope, budget, schedule, resources, quality, risk, and others.

Definition

Stakeholders

Testers

are responsible for determining how to verify that the solution meets the solution
requirements defined by the business analyst, as well as conducting the verification process.
Testers also seek to ensure that the solution meets applicable quality standards and that the
risk of defects of failures is understood and minimized.

Definition

Stakeholders

Regulators

are responsible for the definition and enforcement of standards. Standards may be those that
the team developing the solution is required to follow, standards the solution must meet, or
both. Regulators may enforce legislation, corporate governance standards, audit standards, or
standards defined by organizational centers of competency.

Definition

Stakeholders

Sponsors

is a stakeholder outside the boundary of a given organization or organizational unit. Suppliers


provide products or services to the organization and may have contractual or moral rights and
obligations that must be considered.

Type
Definition

Area

Name
Techniques

Definition
Techniques provide additional information on different ways that a task may be performed or
different forms the output of the task may take. A task may have none, one, or more related
techniques. A technique must be related to at least one task.

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