Tuesday, March 09, 2010

   Quick Links:   Articles     MA Blog     Community Blog     Templates     Books     BA Humor     Events     Jobs     Interview Questions         RSS Feeds

Interview Questions for Business Analysts and Systems Analysts

Careers




Interview Questions


Recent Questions | | Search | Subscribe (RSS)

Give an example of how you would use the problem restatement technique of ‘Repeatedly Ask Why’.
Question: Give an example of how you would use the problem restatement technique of ‘Repeatedly Ask Why’.

Statistics:Article Rating (5924 Views) (3 Additional Answers/Comments)
Posted by: cadams5 on Saturday, April 04, 2009
Categories: Business Analysis, Requirements Analysis (BABOK KA), Analytical and Problem Solving Skills, Elicitation (BABOK KA)


Answer:
 

The Repeatedly Ask Why technique starts with the original problem statement and asks ‘Why’ to identify a new problem statement.  The Business Analyst continues to ask why to each new problem statement until he or she arrives at what is clearly the principle problem.

This technique is so natural that all of us have used it as toddlers.  Using the ‘Repeatedly Ask Why’ technique allows the Business Analyst to overcome any assumptions that may have been made when developing the original problem statement.  So revert back to that 2 year old kid and ask ‘Why’.

Example:

  • We need a new cafeteria vendor at our company campus.  – Why?
  • Because the quality of the food continues to get worse.  – Why?
  • Because they keep reusing leftovers and using lower quality products.  – Why?
  • Because they are trying to make enough money to be profitable.  – Why?
  • Because over the last few months fewer people have been going to the cafeteria.  – Why?
  • Because we had layoffs and there are less people on our company campus.

At this point we can identify that the principle problem is the layoffs resulting in fewer people using the cafeteria.  No matter what vendor you hire, they will have troubles being profitable under these conditions.  So the original problem statement stating that a new vendor is needed is incorrect.

Additional Answers/Comments
By Penguin19 @ Thursday, July 30, 2009 2:45 PM
While I agree with the technique and recognize its strength, can a BA really ask so many whys to a user? Wouldn't it drive a user nuts? What is a subtle way of doing this?

By hemant_chandurkar @ Tuesday, September 15, 2009 1:33 AM
This is RRCA technique. There are 5 why's which identify root cause of problem.

By hemant_chandurkar @ Tuesday, September 15, 2009 1:33 AM
This is RRCA technique. There are 5 why's which identify root cause of problem.

Only registered users may post comments.
  

Do you twitter?: If you want short updates on what's going on in the BA world and at ModernAnalyst.com, simply follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ModernAnalyst



FREE Registration gives you...

Unrestricted access to Information from Leading BA Experts, Interview Questions & Answers, Time-Saving Templates, Discussion Forums and Blogs, and our monthly eJournal with the Latest BA News.

Isn't it time to jumpstart YOUR career!

Login - Register



Privacy Statement  |  Terms Of Use
Copyright 2006-2010 by Modern Analyst Media LLC