Career Forums

 
  Modern Analyst Forums  Careers  Getting Started  New to Business Analysis
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
New Post 5/11/2009 9:14 AM
User is offline businesstee
1 posts
No Ranking


New to Business Analysis 

Hi I have been reading articles from ModernAnalyst and its a very good website.

I am kind of new to Business analyst.  But I really like it and want to get a new job as a business analyst (mostly in the IT section) in NJ/NY area.  So how do I go about it and what kind of things I have to learn (tools, softwares etc)?

To summarize myself, I have done 2 years as a C programmer and then moved on to be a web developer ( did design, usability, best web practices and javascript, xsl coding etc).  Also while I was doing these did some business analysis for a big project I worked.  So I mainly used microsoft word for that.

Now for the last 2 years I have been working as a ASP.Net programmer (C#). 

Since the time I moved to this I really feel like working as a BA is much better than a backend programmer since you really get to the product and hammer out all the bits and pieces into requiremets.

I learned a bit of Visio on my own for the last month.  So please advice how I should proceed with my next career?

 
New Post 6/19/2009 8:35 PM
User is offline Tom Miller, CSPO
45 posts
www.linkedin.com/in/tlgalenson
8th Level Poster


Re: New to Business Analysis 

You need to wonder around this website and look at the job roles, descriptions etc.  Even an IT BA doesn't do a lot of program design or programming.  If you really enjoy the programming your going to miss it when you stop.  Might look into a "Systems Analyst" or Programmer/Analyst type of job.  There is lots of training available from modest prices upto the 10's of thousands of dollars.

HTH

Tom

 
New Post 6/29/2009 8:18 AM
User is offline Laura Brandenburg
14 posts
www.bridging-the-gap.com
10th Level Poster


Re: New to Business Analysis 

Hi there,

Tom made some good points about evaluating the career choice.

If you feel that BA is a good career choice for you, rather than focusing on a technical skill, I would suggest focusing on communication skills. The more you can get yourself in situations where you are interacting with project stakeholders about the project, working with real users of your software, or even supporting your software, the more you'll get an outside perspective and move yourself more into a requirements position than a developer position. If these scenarios are comfortable to you and you enjoy them more than programming, a BA role might be a good fit.

Best,

Laura

 
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
  Modern Analyst Forums  Careers  Getting Started  New to Business Analysis

 






 

Copyright 2006-2024 by Modern Analyst Media LLC