Research Output Strategic Business Analysis
Research Output Strategic Business Analysis
Research Output Strategic Business Analysis
Reporting Topics:
Strategic Business Analysis in the organization.
When business is not clearly defined.
The strategic business analysis and the business analyst.
Describe strategic analysis; identify roles/responses and identify the business
need.
Learning Outcomes:
1. Discuss the purpose of having a Business Analysis standard.
2. Describe and explain strategic business analysis and its importance, purpose
and having a business Analysis standard.
Assigned Discussants/Reporters:
Justin Rabago - Strategic Business Analysis in the organization.
Jaypee Dela Cruz - When business is not clearly defined.
Jelyn Nicole Miña - The strategic business analysis and the business analyst.
Alayssa Grace Repancol - Describe strategic analysis; identify
roles/responses and identify the business need.
DEFINITION
Business Analysis Standard is the standard for the practice of business analysis and for
those who perform business analysis tasks.
Business Analysis is all about tasks and techniques followed to qualify the business
needs and finding the business solution. The solution may include the system
development, process development or improvement and change in the organizational
structure. It is about the process to complete the tasks with quality and those who follow
these processes are known as business analysts. In some organizations, these
business analysts are referred as system analysts, business process analysts, business
system analysts and much more.
The six knowledge areas outlined to be dealt with in business analysis are the following:
3. Reduces Conflict
Initiatives with undefined business needs can be plagued with conflicts of interest due to
unaligned motives and competing priorities. Obtaining agreed upon business needs
provide a source of truth for project decisions to be based upon. Prioritizing
requirements and assessing change requests can be a source of contention when the
business needs are not clear. Once identified, business needs help facilitate
prioritization as the basis of which the activity is derived. Key stakeholders determine
weighting for the prioritization criteria based on their relevance to the business needs.
When stakeholders value different things, having criteria-based prioritization allows for
more objective evaluation of requirement ranking.
When changes to requirements are proposed an assessment must be made of the
change’s relevance and value. Clearly communicated business needs allow the
business analyst to quickly weed out change requests that are not in scope and more
effectively determine requirement changes that sufficiently address a need. Denied
change requests are better received by stakeholders when the business analyst can
explain that the requested change does not address the agreed upon business needs.
4. Guarantee Satisfaction
There is nothing worse than spending time and effort on a project only to end up with
stakeholders that are not satisfied with the end-result. Projects that lose sight of the
business need that initiated the change are destined to result in wasted time as
changes are made that do not adequately solve a problem or seize an opportunity the
way the stakeholders had envisioned. Business Analysts can increase the likelihood of
stakeholder satisfaction by validating requirements, designs and change requests
against the business need throughout the life of the project to ensure that needs are
being met.
STRATEGIC CHALLENGES THAT RESULT TO BUSINESS FAILURE
Nearly every organization is grappling with huge strategic challenges, often with
a need to reimagine its very purpose, identity, strategy, business model, and structure.
Most of these efforts to transform will fail. In most cases, they will miss the mark not
because the new strategy is flawed, but because the organization can’t carry it out.
Corporate transformations points to the six common interrelated reasons for
failures called hidden barriers. Leaders often don’t know — and sometimes do not want
to know — about hidden barriers that stand in the way of their institution’s
transformation.
Hidden barrier #1: Unclear values and conflicting priorities
Often, the underlying problem is not this or that strategy, but rather the process by
which the strategy was formed — or the lack of any such process. In these cases,
strategy is often developed by the leader along with the chief strategy or marketing
executive and only then communicated to the rest of the senior team for discussion. If
the whole team is not involved clarity and commitment are not possible.
Your organization is suffering from this barrier if you notice any of these signs:
Lack of clearly defined and articulated direction — strategy and values — to
guide organizational behavior.
Conflicting priorities, conflicts over resources, and poor execution of strategy,
due to functions and businesses each championing their own priorities.
People feeling overloaded, due to everything being labeled a priority.
Hidden barrier #2: An ineffective senior team
Top-team ineffectiveness was reported by lower levels in almost all the organizations
we studied. Most of the time, this ineffectiveness comes from the top team not speaking
with a common voice about strategy and value. The organization-wide consequences of
this were low trust, low commitment to strategic decisions, and different and sometimes
conflicting understandings of what the strategy even was. In all these cases, the leaders
and their senior teams had not solved the fundamental problem of getting everyone on
the senior team in the room to talk about the right things in the right way — honestly and
constructively.
Your organization is suffering from this barrier if you notice any of these signs among
the senior team:
Most of the time spent in meetings is spent on information sharing and updates
on short-term operational details — sometimes known as “death by PowerPoint”
— rather than on confronting and resolving tough strategic and organizational
issues.
There is little constructive conflict in meetings. The real decisions get made
outside the room.
Members of the senior team don’t speak with a common voice about strategy
and priorities.
Hidden barrier #3: Ineffective leadership styles
When it comes to individual leadership, there are two ineffective styles: a top-down
approach that does not involve team members sufficiently and a laissez-faire,
nonconfrontational style. We’ve found you can attribute either style to the leader’s
personal aversion to conflict or to the lack of a clearly defined process for opening a
constructive debate and carrying it through to a decision (in other words, a decision-
making process). As a result, the leader doesn’t learn about what members of the
senior team or lower levels really think about what’s not working and why.
Your organization is suffering from this barrier if you notice any of these signs:
The leader tends to get lost in the operational details and works “one level below
their pay grade.”
The leader is not visible. They spend relatively little time on communicating
overall strategy or direction or on forcing constructive debate in order to resolve
contesting views.
The leader does not confront issues or people directly to resolve festering
conflicts.
Hidden barrier #4: Poor coordination
Coordination across silos — functions and business units or geographic regions at the
corporate level critical to effective execution of strategy — is always a challenge.
Ineffective senior teams whose members defend their fiefdoms are unable to agree on
how to reorganize and reshape the culture to overcome naturally occurring obstacles to
coordination and collaboration. If there’s friction, then the cross-boundary team structure
for integrating value-creating activities either does not exist or is flawed and the lack of
honest, collective, and public conversation prevents the organization from recognizing
and correcting those flaws.
Your organization is suffering from this barrier if you notice any of these signs:
Research has shown that leaders usually develop not through training, but by carrying
out challenging new assignments. This requires managers to sacrifice for the larger
good by giving up their high potential leaders to other parts of the organization for their
development. When this doesn’t occur naturally and regularly it is tied to three hidden
barriers already discussed: An ineffective senior team (#2) in a siloed organization with
“fiefdoms” (#4) that does not have the perspective or capability to define collaborative
organizational values and behaviors it expects of leaders (#1), nor to design a talent-
management system that enables the cross-boundary developmental assignments
required to develop general management ability.
Your organization is suffering from this barrier if you notice any of these signs:
It keeps coming down to the same usual suspects when something important
needs to get done.
Too few opportunities are provided for leadership and management
development.
The senior team does not review leadership talent regularly or offer career paths
that enable the development of general management capabilities.
Hidden barrier #6: Inadequate vertical communication
Your organization is suffering from this barrier if you notice any of these signs:
There are few forums for upward communication in which managers and
associates can openly and publicly communicate with senior management in a
low-risk environment.
Open, public discussion of difficult issues goes against the cultural grain.
Senior leaders rarely if ever ask lower levels to tell them about problems that
stand in the way of the company’s effectiveness or how those problems can be
improved.
Start with an assessment. If you recognized your organization in each or most of the six
hidden barriers described above, your organization is probably having a hard time
transforming itself in some important way. If most of the items in any given hidden
barrier category are true, that particular barrier is playing a strong role in undermining
the effectiveness and agility of your organization.
2. Disadvantages
• Could be expensive in terms of time and money
• Could lead to bottleneck and bureaucracy
• Not so useful in managing crisis
• Blindfold management from identifying and taking opportunities as they arise.
THE BUSINESS ANALYST
Business Analysts performs collaborative work with stakeholders to identify a need for
strategic or tactical importance called the business needs and enable the enterprise to
address that need and align the resulting strategy for the change higher and lower-level
strategies.
Business analysts collaborate with stakeholders to define the scope of the solution and
gain an understanding of the organizational needs in a way that will provide a
successful future outcome. Besides, they examine the value of the solution if a certain
change is implemented and consider the overall context in the organization while
devising a change strategy.
Strategic business analysts identify business needs and solutions within the context of
the overall direction of a company. They develop and implement critical business
solutions through information gathering, synthesis, review, and testing. They secure and
allocate resources, manage implementation schedules, and facilitate meetings.
Strategic business analysts are commonly part of the IT field and usually work in the
financial, banking, computer, or IT industries. A strategic business analyst's projects can
involve software development and acquisition, systems development, and process
management.
ROLES OF BUSINESS ANALYSTS
The key role a business analyst plays when conducting an analysis of a business is
requirements management. The modern business environment is complex and the
business analyst’s role is to maintain requirements through constant change by using
innovation to do so.
This means their role is to develop technical solutions to problems in a business or to
further a company’s sales revenue by defining, documenting and analyzing
requirements. When they use their role to manage requirements during a project, they
begin to help fulfill business needs.