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Business Analysis or Business Analytics? The Difference Explained

“Business analysis” and “business analytics” sound almost identical. No wonder these terms get confused. Let’s do some analysis on both terms to make the distinction clear. Read on or check out my video on the same topic.

Definitions

Business analysis is a practice of analyzing business problems and opportunities and enabling enterprise change.

Business analytics enables generation of analytical insights from data to help business stakeholders make better decisions.

There is an overlap — both of these disciplines enable solving business problems and rely on data & technology. However, their scope, methods, and outcomes have several key distinctions.

Outcomes

The main outcomes of business analysis are captured business requirements and a shared understanding of requirements by all stakeholders.

Business analysis tackles a wide variety of business problems. Solutions to these problems may include:

Most of the time, solutions to business problems that business analysis deals with will be a combination of changes to multiple components of the enterprise: changes to software, organization, business processes and even the physical environment.

Business analytics focuses on finding solutions to business problems through using data: discovering important data insights that can help choose a better course of action and therefore, make better business decisions.

Overlaps in purpose and outcomes

Are the overlaps between business analysis and business analytics? Of course.

Business analytics methods can be used during business analysis to:

For example, a business analyst may use data analysis to determine:

In summary, a business analyst may use analytics, especially descriptive and diagnostic analytics, to help diagnose and better understand business problems. This is the foundation of discovery and current state analysis.

If we now consider the next stage of the business analysis process — synthesis of solution requirements, business analytics may be part of the solution. For example, a new predictive model, a modified report or a new performance dashboard may be part of stakeholder requirements along with other changes.

On the other hand, we use business analysis to define business analytics requirements. Analytic solutions will only be successful if the business need is well understood, and the requirements are clear. Business requirements come from business analysis.

Activities 

Business analysis activities include (and are not limited to):

To better understand the overlaps and differences, let’s consider business analysis activities and types of analytics next.

To empower decision-makers with insights, we use the following types of business analytics:

People and roles

Professionals in a variety of roles may perform business analysis in organizations, from BA job family that includes business, systems, and process analysts, to leaders, managers, and functional experts. You will find employees with business analysis responsibilities in a Project Management Office (PMO), business groups, a Business Analysis Centre of Excellence, IT departments, and agile cross-functional teams.

To become a business analyst, one will typically study general business disciplines complemented by BA training. This training will include business analysis competencies, tools and techniques, project management methodologies, and sometimes even software development, data management and quality assurance concepts.

On another hand, you will find business analytics professionals in analytics, business intelligence or reporting groups. Their titles will range from data analyst to BI or dashboard developer, analytics designer, or data scientist.

They may come from business, math, statistics, or computer science backgrounds. They will study data analysis, math, statistics, SQL query language, programming languages, scripting, database management, data warehousing, and analytics tools.

Tools

Tools that are typically used to create business analysis deliverables are:

The tools for generating business analytics require more specialized technical skills:

Outputs

Finally, let’s consider the outputs of business analysis and business analytics.

Business analysis deliverables are:

Business analysts support the full solution development lifecycle from analysis through design, development, testing, implementation and rollout.

The deliverables of business analytics are:

Business analytics specialists may also analyze requirements (or delegate this task to a business analyst). They are fully engaged in data preparation, design and development of analytics solutions and may get support from other team members for testing, implementation, and rollout.

If you would like to learn more about each area, explore these courses from Why Change Academy:

If you prefer to learn from videos, here is my video on the same topic:

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