A Quick Glance

  • black-arrow

    Understand the legal and regulatory framework for business analysis

  • black-arrow

    Learn to model business activities

  • black-arrow

    Know the relevance of the business analyst role

  • black-arrow

    Learn from certified instructors

With delegates turning up for the various courses of BCS, BCS deemed it fit to introduce a level of certification whereby the true knowledge of the delegates could be tested both in written and verbally or orally as well. This came up as the BCS International Diploma in Business Analysis. The candidates are required to clear four different exams and having done this they should appear for an oral examination also.

Who should take this course

The International Diploma is designed for business and IT professionals who want to enhance their business analysis skills. This BCS International Diploma is meant for  business analysts, business managers, their staff, business change managers and project managers.

More

Prerequisites

The delegates coming to the examination hall should bring some photographic identification to the hall for validation prior to the exam (Driving License, Passport and named Work ID badges are all acceptable). For further information, please refer to the Identification Policy which can be found on the BCS website. The delegates, as an examination policy, are required to arrive at least 15 minutes ahead of the allocated start time as this helps to keep the examination schedule running smoothly.

Delegates will be expected to have the experience to environments as a business analyst, project manager, change management, quality or a similar role. In addition, they will be expected to have reviewed allploma. the courses and their syllabus that fall under this diploma.

More

What Will You Learn

  • Develop the appropriate skills and proficiencies required by a Business Analyst 
  • Instil a business analysis process model approach to change initiatives and organisational problem solving
  • Understand how a business strategy is evolved
  • How to identify and document business issues?
  • Consider the stakeholders viewpoints  who will be affected or are interested in the change project and document their views
  • How to lead and work within a formal requirements engineering framework
  • Identify and develop a business case which would be used to justify a project
  • Modelling techniques and notation to present business processes
More

What's included

  Course Overview

The BCS International Diploma in Business Analysis is a leading industry standard that every Business Analysts would like to have on their resume. Business Analysis plays a vital role within an organisation, helping to identify business needs and providing solutions to the business problems. The BCS International Diploma in Business Analysis is now an industry recognised certification that is accepted globally. The certification proves the knowledge, skills and capabilities of a Business Analyst.

 

Exams

The candidates need to pass four exams overall and then the oral exam. The delegate will have to pass both the Core ModThe Path To the International Diplomaule exams – Business Analysis Practice and Requirements Engineering. Then pass one exam from the Knowledge Based Module which contains Business Analysis Foundation, Business Change, Commercial Awareness, and IS Project Management. To complete the four exams it is mandatory for the delegate to complete one exam of his/her choice from the Practitioner Module which is comprised of Modeling Business Process, Benefits Management and Business Acceptance, Systems Modelling Techniques, and Systems Development Essentials. After these four exams come to the final and last Oral exam during which the delegates have to sit with two examiners who can query the delegate anything regarding the modules that have been covered by the delegate. Also, the examiners can ask the delegate questions regarding the skills the candidate already has. The delegate is given 50 minutes to answer these queries.

 

More

  Course Content

  • The business context (K Level 4/5)
    • The rationale for business analysis
    • Sectors of the economy
    • Business environment analysis
    • The legal and regulatory framework for business analysis
    • SWOT analysis
    • Business performance measurement
    • Business analysis within the lifecycle for business change
  • Stages of the lifecycle
  • Business analysis techniques (K Level 4/5)
    • Investigating and documenting business situations
    • Stakeholder analysis and business perspectives
    • Modelling business activities
    • Business events
    • Business rules
    • Gap analysis
  • Business case development (K Level 4/5)
    • Rationale for making a business case
    • Contents of a business case
    • Options
    • The financial case
    • Investment appraisal techniques
    • Risk analysis
    • Impact analysis
    • Lifecycle for the business case
  • Requirements definition (K Level 4/5)
    • Requirements engineering
    • Requirements elicitation
    • Requirements analysis
    • Requirements validation
  • Requirements management and documentation (K Level 4/5)
    • Requirements management
    • Change control
    • Version control
    • Tools in requirements management
    • Types of requirements
    • Documenting requirements
    • Requirements modelling
  • Knowledge-based specialism (K Level 2/3)
    • Relevance of the selected module to business analysis
    • The holistic view of a business system
    • Professionalism and business analysis
    • Projects and business analysis
  • Practitioner specialism (K Level 2/3)
    • Relevance to the business analyst role
    • Relevance of the module to an organisation

Description of the module

More

International Diploma

Exemptions for the BCS International Diploma in Business Analysis

 

IIBA exemption: Holders of The Certified Business Analysis Professional (CBAP®) qualifications are exempt from the Requirements Engineering module and the knowledge-based specialist module.

IREB exemption: If the delegates have completed IREB’s Certified Professional for Requirements Engineering (CPRE) Foundation level, then they don’t need to take the BCS Certificate in Requirements Engineering.

Organisational Context exemption: If the delegates have attained the Organisational Context module, this can count towards their Diploma. They won’t need to attain Commercial Awareness, the module that has replaced Organisational Context

 

What Next?

As the saying goes “This is not the end but just the beginning”. The completion of this course and the certification helps the delegates to start preparing for the next step – the Advanced International Diploma in Business Analysis.



BCS International Diploma in Business Analysis Enquiry

 

Enquire Now


----- OR -------

Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Wrexham

Wrexham                                   

Wrexham is the largest town located in the north of Wales and also an educational, commercial, administrative, commercial and retail centre. Wrexham is located between lower Dee valley alongside England border and Weish Mountains. Historically it is the part of Denbighshire, the town became part of Clwyd in 1974, and since 1996 it has been the centre of Wrexham County Borough. According to 2011 census, Wrexham had a population of 61,603 which made it a fourth largest urban area in Wales.

History

Council purchased Parciau in the year 1907, and it later turned into a Public Park. In 1910 first cinema in Wrexham was opened. The population of Wrexham continued to grow drastically. In 1901 population was 14,966 and by 1931 it reached 18,567. The population of Wrexham crossed 40,000 for the first time in the year 1981. First-time electricity was generated in the year 1900 in Wrexham. In 1907 electric trams replaced horse-drawn trams and in 1927 they were replaced by buses.

In 1913-1917 Garden Village was built in Wrexham. In the 1920s and 1930s Wrexham council started working for slum clearance. At that time new council house estate has been constructed at Action Park. Other council estates were built at Maes Y Dre and Spring Lodge in 1930s. In 1965 boundaries of Wrexham was extended. In the 1930s at Queens Park, council estate was built. Another was established at Bryn Offa. Action Park estate was extended in the 1960s.

In 1911 Gresford Collery was opened. An explosion and fire accident at Gresford Collery in 1934 killed 261 miners, and three rescuers also died. In late 20th century, traditional industries declined in Wrexham. Coal mining almost ended. Gresford Collary closed in 1973. In 1986 Bersham Collery was closed. New industries came into existence in Wrexham including Pharmaceuticals, engineering, chemicals, electronics and food processing. During Second World War, a big ordnance factory was built at Wrexham, and it was converted into industrial estate after 1945. In 1983 Bersham Heritage Centre was opened. In 1985 Maelor Hospital was opened. The swimming pool was constructed in 1970. In 1998 it was refurbished and renamed as Waterworld Leisure Complex. In 1999 two new shopping centres were opened in Wrexham named Henblas Square and Island Green. First Wrexham Science Festival was held in 1998. In the 21st century, Wrexham is still a developing city. In 2002 Border Retail Park was opened. In 2008 Meadow Shopping Centre was opened. Now Wrexham has a population of 43000.

More