The DNA Agile BA
The DNA Agile BA
The DNA Agile BA
Here we go.
Welcome to Mastering Business Analysis, where we bring you the tips, tools, and techniques to succeed
in your career as a business analyst.
In today's episode, I'm going to share with you an excerpt from a presentation I did a week ago at
Business Analyst World Chicago.
The presentation was entitled, The DNA of a Great Agile Business Analyst.
Agile is more than a way of delivering a product to customers faster. It's a mindset, a philosophy based on
a set of values and principles. The best business analysts in agile environments have several key
characteristics in common that allow them to bring value to their teams and organizations.
In today's episode, we'll explore the elements that make up the DNA of a great agile business analyst,
help you to understand the impact of having or not having those traits, and find out what you can do if you
or other team members don't have these traits as part of your DNA.
My original presentation had a lot of interactive elements, which unfortunately I can't do on this podcast,
so I'm only including a portion of the presentation.
I've also included a video so you can see the slides that I used in the presentation, so I highly recommend
you go to masteringbusinessanalysis.com slash episode 47 to watch the video.
Today we're going to talk about the mindset and key traits you need to become a great agile business
analyst.
We'll talk about how combinations of the traits allow you to bring more value to your team and your
organization, and find out what you can do if you don't have these characteristics as part of your DNA.
Let's start by taking a look at the DNA of a traditional waterfall business analyst.
We see how key characteristics come together to form behaviors that drive great business analysis.
Things like being a great communicator, and being detail oriented.
Not gathering requirements, but discovering requirements and then someone who has a lot of confidence.
They create trust with their stakeholders and subject matter experts and they even have a little bit of
perfectionism in them.
Now while these traits create someone who's great at business analysis and a waterfall
environment, some of these traits are also at odds with the agile principles.
We're uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping others to
do it.
Through this work, we've come to value individuals and interactions over processes and tools.
Well waterfall business analysts are all about processes and tools.
We need to know the details of the contract and negotiate it, because we have a big design
up front.
We spent all this time creating a plan and trying to control change, we shouldn't have
to respond to change.
Deliver working software frequently, from a couple of weeks to a couple of months, with
It takes me a couple of months just to create the requirements, how can we deliver working
Business people and developers must work together daily throughout the project.
Have you ever seen business people and developers try and work together?
I think that 100 page requirements document I created is a good measure of progress.
The best architectures, requirements and designs emerge from self-organizing teams.
How could they emerge if they don't have a business analyst on them?
For those individuals who truly embrace Agile, something happens in their minds and bodies.
A mindset shift.
A mutation.
They're able to separate needs from wants and really deliver those needs.
Through that, they create a big design up front so that we see the big picture and know
If we peer inside the mind of an Agile business analyst, we see something a little bit different.
Instead of focusing on needs and wants, we focus on what's valuable to our customers.
If we did a big design up front, a lot of that would go to waste because it would change
over time.
So we can develop our skills so that we can go and help out the tester.
We might not be able to test as well as a tester, but we've adapted our skills so that
we can jump into that role and help out when needed.
We do just enough so that we can get something out in the market, get feedback, analyze the
We have visionary combined with collaborative, value-driven combined with emergence, teamwork
Now when these base pairs combine, we see different behaviors emerge.
When visionary combines with collaborative, we get someone who's a storyteller, someone
who can create a compelling vision and then collaborate with the team to develop an appropriate
solution.
We understand the customer value, and we also understand that details will emerge as we
As I mentioned before, someone who develops their skills so that they can help the specific
And when openness combines with vulnerability, we get someone who's transparent.
And transparency is a key to understanding what's going on within your team and constantly
improving.
They're comfortable with ambiguity, and they know that things will change.
They develop their skills and help out the team wherever they're needed.
So let's look at some of the headaches or pain points that might occur if you don't
have some of these traits as part of your DNA.
If we look at the behaviors of storyteller, adaptive, fungible, and transparent, all are
If we have someone who has a visionary trait, without the collaborative trait, we have someone
If we have someone who's collaborative without the visionary piece, the team collaborates,
If we have the value-driven trait without the emergence trait, we get big design up
front.
The team will be busy producing things, but it might not be the right things.
You need both to be adaptive and work on the right things at the right time.
Now a lot of Waterfall BAs have the trait of teamwork, but without the learner piece,
but they're not applying what they've learned to help out the team.
If you're open without the vulnerability piece, you get someone who's defensive.
They get feedback, and because that perfectionism creeps in, they get defensive.
If you have vulnerability without the openness piece, you get fear.
Someone who is vulnerable without embracing openness becomes very fearful, fearful of
You need both openness and vulnerability to become transparent and continuously inspect,
So what can we do if we don't have some of these key traits as part of our DNA?
If we're missing the visionary or value piece, we can pair with the product owner.
If the product owner doesn't have those traits, you can work with other leaders or even get
Help them to understand why you want to pair with them, why you want to learn their roles,
and develop your skills so that you can help them going forward.
If you're light on vulnerability and emergence, you have to learn to let go.
Create a safe zone, a safe environment where you're able to be vulnerable and you get comfortable
a storyteller so that they can communicate a compelling vision and collaborate with the
Someone who's adaptable, open to feedback, knows that details will emerge and we can
Someone who's fungible, someone who learns new things and applies those new learnings
And at their heart, there's someone who's transparent because the only way to inspect
We looked at how we have to move away from documentation to conversations, from big design
We've also seen how combinations of those traits allow you to bring more value to your
team, become a storyteller, be more adaptive, become transparent and fungible so that you
And we've also talked about some approaches that you can take if you don't have some of
those characteristics as part of your DNA, pairing with the right people and learning
to let go of some of that perfectionist that made you successful in a waterfall environment.
As I mentioned earlier, you can see a video that goes along with this presentation by
Finally today, I'll leave you with a quote and this quote is from James Cameron.
As always, if you have a guest suggestion or topic you'd like to hear on a future episode,
you can send me an email and you can send that to podcast at MasteringBusinessAnalysis.com.