Learn state-of-the-art practices for gathering and documenting business process and user requirements based on the use-case approach. Over the course of a case-study workshop project, trainees gain experience facilitating requirements-gathering interview sessions, and creating textual use-case documentation with supporting diagrams.
The course covers what the Business Analyst needs to accomplish in each requirements-gathering session (goals, agenda, who to invite, artifacts, etc.) as the project progresses - starting from business use-case sessions that focus on the business context through to system use cases that focus on user-IT interactions. Trainees also learn advanced techniques (extending, generalized and included use cases) for structuring use cases that result in requirements documentation that is easy to revise as business rules change.
The course employs use cases, today’s most widely accepted method of requirements capture. The clear style and organization of use cases makes them well-suited as a source of test cases and for communicating with both business stakeholders and developers. In addition, use cases are a central aspect of iterative development methodologies such as IBM’s RUP and Microsoft’s MSF.
Why?
• This course provides clear guidance by pacing the trainee through the requirement-gathering process from high-level business use cases down to low-level requirements.
• BAs are often confused about how best to divide up the requirements documentation for a large project.
• Trainees learn how to divide the project into end-to-end business process requirements as business use-cases and how best to decompose these into smaller units as system use cases.
• BAs need help in documenting the text of user requirements.
• This course provides explicit, detailed instruction in the writing, numbering and organization of the textual requirements.
• Small changes to the business environment unfortunately often lead to big changes in the documentation.
• This course provides detailed instruction in the use of advanced documentation features (extensions, inclusions and generalizations) that reduce redundancies in the documentation, making it easier to revise.
• BAs need experience to be effective facilitators of requirements-gathering sessions.
• Trainees gain practice acting as facilitators for their group as they advance the case-study project.
What makes this course stand out from the competition?
• Learn what you need to find out from stakeholders at each stage of the project.
• Trainees learn by doing - by developing a case study in ‘real time.’
• Group facilitation sessions provide in-depth experience in using a team-based approach to development.
• 2 courses in one:
• Many of our competitors offer one course in requirements gathering and another in use-cases. Rather than teach you hard-to-apply general rules for requirements analysis that require a follow-up course, we teach the topic once – the right way. In one course you learn how to capture requirements with detailed guidance for doing it using today’s most popular approach - use cases.
• Includes valuable take-home materials: Comprehensive printed material including valuable job aids, examples, glossaries, tips, the Noble Path, as well as agendas and lists of questions for each type of interview session.
• In keeping with the practical nature of the course, the course content draws from direct experience working in a variety of sectors, including banking, accounting, call centers, education and NGOs.
• Focused content: includes the practical tools and techniques most commonly used to get the job done.
• Facilitate requirements-gathering sessions (with Business and System Use Cases).
• Examine the impact of the project on the enterprise through business use-case analysis.
• Create detailed textual requirements with the Use Case Description Template.
• Decrease software bugs and omissions introduced in the analysis phase of your project – by employing powerful use case techniques that reduce redundancies and inconsistencies in the documentation.
• Communicate effectively with the development team.
• Model high-level requirements with use case diagrams
• Understand how use cases are used in the context of iterative development.
• Link use cases to other project artifacts – such as business entities, non-functional requirements and activity diagrams.
• Document constraints and assumptions
• Working in small interview teams, trainees facilitate requirements-gathering sessions and document requirements for an end-to-end case study, learning what types of interviews, questions and techniques are appropriate for each phase of the IT project.
• The approach is presented in an easy-to-follow step-by-step plan.
• Each step is introduced and demonstrated by the instructor. Trainees follow by actively facilitating and participating in requirements-gathering sessions.
BABOK 2 Alignment
This course addresses the following BABOK knowledge areas and tasks:
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