How Do You Know When You Are Doing Enterprise Analysis ?

How Do You Know When You Are Doing Enterprise Analysis ?


Enterprise analysis puts the business analystOpens in a new tab. in a strategic role, a frame of reference that we business analysts are uniquely qualified for but rarely engaged in.  We aren’t usually assigned to interpret business strategies at an organisational level, but when it does happen our work gives context to the plan for requirements gathering and solution definition.  Imagine how rewarding it could be to help optimise the alignment of business and information technology (IT).

Stepping Up to Enterprise Analysis 

My own opportunity came as a former employer was dissolving. Ironically the leaders saw the need to analyse the remaining critical functions and assess the gaps in technology required to fulfil the new mission: too process legal claims against the organisation and distribute the remaining assets. 

For four exhilarating years I contributed at this level, taking on projects that included functional forecasts, systems consolidation and streamlining, disaster recovery and business resumption planning.  I’d like to share my experiences in enterprise analysis with all of you in the hope that, when the opportunity strikes, you’ll have some ideas on where to start and how to approach the web of organisational complexity.

Expanding Organisational Context

IIBA’s BA Body of Knowledge (BABOK)Opens in a new tab. describes enterprise analysis as a pre-project activity whose outputs “provide context to requirements analysis and to solution identification for a given initiative or for long-term planning.”  When engaged in enterprise analysis you may find yourself doing any number of familiar activities, simply expanded to consider the organisation as a whole:

  1. Documenting the Business Architecture. Modelling the components that make up the organisation, in terms of people resources and roles, information flow and transformation, application infrastructure and interdependencies, technology platforms, and security practices and constraints;
  2. Defining Project Scope. Elaborating what’s needed to move a new business opportunity forward, in terms of people, process, and technology;
  3. Conducting Feasibility Studies.  Researching the cross-functional impact of solution sets to find the optimal answer for enterprise objectives;
  4. Performing a Risk Assessment.  Evaluate risks, probability, and impact to the organisation and its goals;
  5. Preparing the Business Case.   Reporting on the benefits and costs associated with a strategic solution proposal;
  6. Planning the Change Management Approach.  Defining the manner in which business change will be introduced, measured, and continuously improved upon organisation-wide.

And so you see that you’ve done enterprise analysis all along, only within the narrower perspective of an individual project.

Your New Role in the Enterprise

It may seem a stretch to cross over into the broader sphere of providing analysis and benchmarking to the strategic planners of your organisation, but with guidance you can meet the challenge.

Today’s Business Analysts need to be able to apply their skills equally in projects that assess and improve the business domain, process components, or supporting systems.

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