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New Post 10/2/2008 5:54 PM
User is offline Craig Brown
560 posts
www.betterprojects.net
4th Level Poster




technical OR social skills? 

Adrian, Vinny, Tony, Guy, Perry, and EVERYBODY on the forum, I have a question for you.

Wht do you consider more important - the technical skills or the socio/politico/cultural skills?  Which area should a junior BA focus their professional development efforts on first?  Which is hardest to get right, and which has the greater influence on project succes.

 
New Post 10/3/2008 1:08 AM
User is offline Guy Beauchamp
257 posts
www.smart-ba.com
5th Level Poster




Re: technical OR social skills? 

Craig,

Brilliant question! BAs have traditionally majored on the technical BA skills and have a whole set of languages for communicating analysis in that (e.g. Six Sigma, Agile, SSDAM). We do not have a language for communicating analysis emotionally (or socio/politico/cultural to use your phrase). I have started thinking about how can analyis (an essentially rational process) be conducted emotionally (irrationally) given that emotions are abstracted rationality (see my other post for why I think that).

Which is more important, you ask, which should a BA focus on developing first? I thought at first this would be a yin/yang: without one there is not the other. But this is not true: if emotions are abstracted rationality then the BA needs to acquire technical skills before they can abstract them to emotions, and in order to try and "reverse engineer" other people's emotions they would need to have an uderstanding on the rationality that they were built from.

You also ask which is hardest to get right - my answer is emotional communication because we (well I, anyway) don't know (can't analyse and prove) how it works.

You also asked which has greatest impact on project success: this is like the development/analysis debate I would suggest in that we see projects succeed or fail ususally as the result of emotional decisions. But emotional decisions are abstracted rationality - so getting the rationality right is the fundamental bit and therefore more important. Emotions are the symptoms and not the cause.

Thems my thoughts (still work in progress) and I look forward to reading other people's views because I think this is a great and fundamental to BA question.

Guy

 
New Post 10/3/2008 2:30 PM
User is offline Perry McLeod
70 posts
8th Level Poster




Re: technical OR social skills? 

This, like everything else in life, is not binary. The use of hard or soft skills is provisional and conditional. We use both hard and soft skills at the same time in most circumstances, most of the time. However there are times where one is required over the other. The trick is to know when .... and there in lies the rub my friend - this is not something that we can teach you. Your brain quite literally has to be rewritten (trained, if you will) to function in this way, It takes about 10,000 to master any given skill. The more to work at it the more you brain will adapt.

This is all about ... fuzzy logic. You can't define the problem space is you are not a good communicator and relationship manager; nor can you articulate a solution that can be implemented unless you are a good analyst. Our profession is the perfect blend of art and science. Gone are the days of the management consultant - we are the management consultants now. I like to think of myself as a physiologist of sorts. Rather than working with people to solve their problems I work with businesses. A business is a not just a person in the eyes of the law but in the eyes of society too. Businesses act just like you and me, because they are made up of you and me. Current economic situations prove this point.

As it has already been stated - the answer is a little from column A and a little from column B. HOWEVER if you HAVE to pick one - I would spend time studying the technical aspects off business analysis and trust that you will develop as a communicator as time passes ... once you have a few years under your belt then begin to take courses on management, psychology, philosophy and the like. You will have the context and the learning will be more effective.

Does that help at all?

Perry McLeod, CBAP, PMP | Senior Business Analysis Consultant PJM Limited
Vice President Professional Development and Certification, IIBA Toronto/GTA
Mobile: (416) 562-0169 | Fax: (416) 840-6742 | E-mail: [email protected]
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/perrymcleod

 
New Post 10/3/2008 11:00 PM
User is offline Adrian M.
765 posts
3rd Level Poster




Re: technical OR social skills? 

The answer is: IT DEPENDS!

Buy you already knew that...

The answer depends on many variables such as:

  • the type of project: analyst working on functional specifications for embedded system vs. helping to improve the business process for a psychology clinic,
  • the culture of the organization: in a very political organization with lots of backstabbers, social skills are a must,
  • the maturity of the analysis process: an analyst working within the boundaries of an established process with clearly defined tasks and artifacts might need less social/negation skills than a consultant walking in an organization which doesn't know what a process even is.

One thing I noticed is that many analysts, especially those coming from the technical side, tend to begin their career by focusing on hard skills (UML, use cases, process modeling, functional specifications, etc.) and as their career progresses they tend to focus more on soft skills.

- Adrian


Adrian Marchis
Business Analyst Community Blog - Post your thoughts!
 
New Post 10/4/2008 1:35 AM
User is offline Jarett Hailes
155 posts
6th Level Poster




Re: technical OR social skills? 

I'll continue along the lines of Adrian's thinking - it does depend based on external environmental variables that he described, but I would also recommend that you do the opposite of what most analysts tend to do (e.g. focus on developing technical skills if that's their background).   If you come from a more technical persuasion, consciously work on your interpersonal/soft skills.  Go to a Toastmaster's club, read a book on the subject, make yourself do something purposely uncomfortable (read Tim Ferris' 4 Hour Work Week for great examples). 

If you gravitate towards what you know already, you run the risk of never getting around to properly focusing on balancing your skill set, and as a result impede your overall professional development.  I'm not advocating ignoring the ongoing development of your area of relative strength, but it will benefit you much greater in the long run if you put the time up front to improve on your greatest weaknesses.  You will become a much stronger professional as a result and likely improve your employability and self-satisfaction.

 
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