Forums for the Business Analyst

 
  Modern Analyst Forums  Careers  Getting Started  Does a BA should be Domain specific OR can be Generalist?
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
New Post 11/10/2010 5:12 PM
Unresolved
User is offline Rajee
1 posts
No Ranking


Does a BA should be Domain specific OR can be Generalist? 

Hi everybody,

I am a new member of Modern Analyst.
My question is very simple and straight - Does a BA should be Domain specific OR can be Generalist?

Expecting your active participation.

Regards,
Rajee

 
New Post 11/15/2010 12:09 AM
User is offline Kimbo
456 posts
5th Level Poster


Re: Does a BA should be Domain specific OR can be Generalist? 

 Hi Rajee,

Simple answer is both are possible. BA techniques are domain independent and allow us to be a generalist. Plus a BA with good techniques may choose to specialise in a particular vertical market. Often the latter person may command a higher rate depending on the vertical market, their depth of experience and the market forces (supply / demand) at the time.

There is also another group claiming to be BAs who are really just subject matter experts in their vertical market but lack basic BA skills. Not really BAs but for lack of another title they are called that.

Kimbo

 
New Post 11/18/2010 8:21 AM
User is offline Jarett Hailes
155 posts
6th Level Poster




Re: Does a BA should be Domain specific OR can be Generalist? 

Hi Rajee,

As Kimbo noted, a BA can be either.  A BA needs to have sufficient (but not necessarily expert-level) domain knowledge to do their job, and good BAs can pick up the necessary level of domain knowledge in a relatively short amount of time.  If you focus on one or two domains and gain expert level knowledge your ramp-up period is certainly quicker on new projects and typically you can engage stakeholders more effectively since you itimately understand their environment.

However, you also run the risk of becoming less impartial during your tasks due to your inherent knowledge on the topics at hand.  I like BAs who can bring fresh ideas from other industries and experiences, although if you continually have an open mind to new opportunities and are a career student of the world, you can be a creative and dynamic asset to your organization even if it's the one you've worked for your whole life.

Your question spawned a related one in my mind that makes for good discussion as well: if you have a collection of BAs within an organization should they be shared across the business, or become experts within a specific domain of the organization (e.g. HR, procurement, etc.) and dedicated to that business unit?

 
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
  Modern Analyst Forums  Careers  Getting Started  Does a BA should be Domain specific OR can be Generalist?

Community Blog - Latest Posts

As Business Analysts in Agile teams, we often hear about Definition of Ready (DOR) and Definition of Done (DOD). But beyond the buzzwords, these two concepts are powerful tools to drive clarity, consistency, and quality in our work. Definition of Ready ensures a user story is truly ready for development. It answers: Is this story clear, feasible...
In today's fast-paced digital world, successful projects aren't just built on great code—they're built on clarity. And that clarity often comes from one key player: the Business Analyst. At the heart of every great product or system is a need—a business goal, a customer pain point, or a regulatory requirement. But busines...
I have always loved cooking. I learned from my Grandma June and her kitchen was her sanctuary, a small, warm sunlit space filled with jars of spices, stacks of cookbooks, and the comforting smell of something always on the stove or baking in the oven. Grandma June was as great a cook as she was a teacher to me. She never followed a recipe “to...

 






 

Copyright 2006-2025 by Modern Analyst Media LLC