An energetic business professional specializing in providing coordination to operations, development, and other departments.
An experienced Analyst Coordinator, who delivers on in improving processes and procedures, with ability to grasp new situations and adapt to the challenges at hand. With exceptional organizational leadership skills and project coordination with strong qualifications in client service development.
Recognized for possessing strong tech-savvy, interpersonal, communication, problem solving and decision making skills. Perceived as resourceful in overcoming obstacles ensuring milestones are met, while respecting time, cost & performance criteria.
Organized, responsible, creative, adaptable, funny, flexible, sociable, enjoy learning new things, doesn't mind getting hands dirty and rolling up the sleeves to get down to the task at hand.
Certificate of Completion working towards Associate's Certificate in Project Management / Business Analysis
Details and Extracurriculars
14 CDU IIBA Endorsed Curriculum
An intensive practical course covering all aspects of the Business Analyst role – from requirements gathering to testing. The emphasis of the course is on learning practical tools and techniques that can immediately be put to use. All major techniques – both Structured and Object-Oriented (OO) – are addressed. Each trainee receives a hard copy of all course material as well as a Job Aids booklet, containing useful templates, examples, guidelines and glossary for use back on the job. NEW!! Supports the most up-to-date standards and guidelines in the industry: BABOK 2, ITIL V3 and UML 2.2
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.