Effective PM and BA Role Collaboration
Direct Price: $49.95
Delivering Business Value through Projects and Programs Successfully
By Ori Schibi, PMP and Cheryl Lee, PMI-PBA, CBAP, PMP
Hardcover, 6 x 9, 366 pages
ISBN: 978-1-60427-113-3
September 2015
LEARN & EARN: Get 7.4 PDUs in the PMI skill areas of Leadership or Strategic and Business Management Skills
Description
Designated by PMI® as “Recommended Reading” for Business Analysts
This innovative guide shows how the business analyst (BA) role can be executed in collaboration with the project or program manager (PM) role to produce higher quality products, requirements, and success rates, with solutions that deliver business value and products and services that better satisfy stakeholder needs. It evaluates the PM and BA roles current contrasting perceptions and defines the roles they should fulfill.
Key Features
- Applies concepts that are aligned with the PMBOK® Guide, BABOK® and the PMI-PBA® and CBAP®/CCBA® Certification exams
- Provides proven concepts and approaches for developing functionally harmonious partnerships between the PM and BA roles, within their own context and specific challenges, that are maintained from the business case to post-project evaluation
- Addresses the challenges associated with these role definitions, overlaps and gaps between the PM and BA roles, and introduces collaboration techniques to improve resource allocation, efficiency, and effectiveness in projects and the organization
- Illustrates the flow of work and responsibilities between the PM and BA through both the project and product lifecycles
- WAV™ offers downloadable checklists for determining Agile suitability, PM and BA role collaboration areas, a variety of requirements elicitation and management checklists, and other tools—available from the Web Added Value™ Download Resource Center
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Challenges Related to Project Management and Business Analysis
Chapter 2: Misconceptions of the Roles of the PM and the BA
Chapter 3: Growing and Integrating the Professions
Chapter 4: Enterprise Analysis, Portfolio Management, and the PMO
Chapter 5: Communication and Stakeholder Expectations Management
Chapter 6: Requirements Definition
Chapter 7: Assumptions, Constraints, Dependencies, and Risks
Chapter 8: Resource Management
Chapter 9: Two Types of Change—Project and Organizational Change Management
Chapter 10: Project Quality, Recovery and Lessons Learned
Chapter 11: Building a Partnership: Shared Responsibility Throughout—Putting It All Together
Reviews
“Many have struggled with the overlap between the PM and BA roles on a project. This is a book every BA and PM should read with a highlighter in hand.”
—Kevin Aguanno, PMP, PMI-ACP, CSM, FPMAC,Agile Project Management Pioneer and President, Genxus
“The combined power of the PM and BA roles comes to life in this unique and ground-breaking book. Finally, we have a road map that takes the power of these two practices and pulls them together for the benefit of all.”
—David Barrett, National Program Director, Schulich Executive Education Centre
“An enjoyable read, written by two people who know their areas well, and also provide wonderful secrets for collaboration…it’s an excellent coverage of the discipline of Project Management, providing fine details about issues and concerns, and practices for addressing them. PMs, BAs, and any person who wishes to grow in their ability to handle risks, resource management or partnerships, just as a few examples, would gain by reading this book.”
—Chris Wright, Project Manager-Brainspace Corporation (As reviewed in PM World Journal, Jan. 2016)