Forums for the Business Analyst

 
  Modern Analyst Forums  ModernAnalyst.c...  Introductions &...  Newbie Systems Analyst from Puerto Rico Excited to Have Found Forum
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
New Post 9/10/2008 2:15 PM
User is offline Ms. Lisa
1 posts
www.lisasantos.net
No Ranking


Newbie Systems Analyst from Puerto Rico Excited to Have Found Forum 

Hi Everyone,

I started my new role as Systems Analyst about a month ago working with a well-known company in the Medical Devices sector.  I am working with the Demand/Forecast Planning team.   I am on a 6 month contract.  I have never held this type of position before. My background is primarily in programming and quality assurance. So I have a big challenge ahead of me.

My first task is to gather requirements for several reports that need to be revamped or automated using Cognos. I am challenged with finding out what are all the reports the department uses, what applications they currently use to run reports, where the data comes from, how often it is generated, etc. I have no example projects to get guidance from.  This also is a new role for the department.  I am supposed to be the liason between the business and technical team.

Can anyone please guide me where in the forum I could find out how to get started gathering requirements for 'reports' instead of about a software or web application?  I'm feeling lost and I can't even turn to my boss for help because he travels so much.  i have been doing alot of reading and meeting with different people. I'm just not sure what kinds of questions i should be asking to gather requirements.  Also, not sure what kind of requirements template I should use or do I have to make up my own.

Any help or advice is appreciated.

Thank you,

Lisa =)

 

 
New Post 9/10/2008 4:01 PM
User is offline Guy Beauchamp
257 posts
www.smart-ba.com
5th Level Poster




Re: Newbie Systems Analyst from Puerto Rico Excited to Have Found Forum 

Hi Lisa and welcome to the community!

Given that you are gathering requirements for reports that already exist, I would suggest the easiest method would be to get hold of (or mock up) the reports and for each individual item of information on the report get a definition from the report users of what that item should contain.

Made up examples:

Report field "Date": the date in format dd/mm/yy that the report relates to. It will be the last day of the week that the report accumulates figures for and is always a Friday.

Report field "Sales": a currency value format $99,999.99 of total sales that week per salesperson. Calculated by adding all sales for each salesperson where that salesperson is recorded as the salesperson for an order. Will always be a positive number.

This means that on the report mock-ups you have labels for each item of data you are defining and then separately you define what that item is defined as.

The key point here is -in the first instance - to only record what the users need from the report. Once that has been agreed, if you need to define sources for the data then only do so when the users have signed off on what they need the report to contain.

I would strongly recommend that you agree this approach with technical team before embarking on it: you need them to be telling you that if you produce requirements for reports in this fashion that they can develop the reports from them.

There are more formal ways of documenting data requirements (I am thinking of data models here) but from the scenario you have given it does not sound as if you need to go to that level of abstraction?

How does that sound?

Guy

 
New Post 9/11/2008 10:54 AM
User is offline Ms. Lisa
1 posts
www.lisasantos.net
No Ranking


Re: Newbie Systems Analyst from Puerto Rico Excited to Have Found Forum 

Thank you Guy! I certainly appreciate this recommendation.

 
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
  Modern Analyst Forums  ModernAnalyst.c...  Introductions &...  Newbie Systems Analyst from Puerto Rico Excited to Have Found Forum

Community Blog - Latest Posts

In today's ever-evolving market, businesses must adapt swiftly to remain competitive and meet the needs of a fast-paced digital economy. Among the various business strategies available, digital transformation, customer-centricity, and sustainability have emerged as top priorities. Let’s explore why these strategies are critical for busine...
The Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA) certification is a pivotal credential for networking professionals, validating your skills in networking fundamentals, security, automation, and programmability. Preparing for the CCNA exam can be challenging, but with the right strategy, resources, and mindset, you can successfully achieve this certific...
The CEO/CIO's Guide to Architecting AI: Vision to Value in Minutes Introduction to Architected AI Artificial intelligence (AI) is becoming part of our life at an unprecedented pace. As CEOs and CIOs grapple with how to leverage this powerful technology to drive strategy and enhance operations, the concept of Architected AI becomes importa...

 



Upcoming Live Webinars




 

Copyright 2006-2024 by Modern Analyst Media LLC