Which statement best describes the business analyst's role in a predictive (plan-driven/waterfall) project life cycle?
The business analyst works iteratively with the team to refine requirements every sprint, welcoming frequent change without formal approval.
The business analyst gathers and documents detailed requirements at the start of the project, establishing a baseline; later changes are handled through formal change control.
The business analyst postpones writing formal requirements until prototypes are delivered so stakeholders can react to tangible models.
The business analyst focuses mainly on backlog grooming and writing brief user stories instead of producing comprehensive requirement documents.
In predictive life cycles, a business analyst performs extensive requirements elicitation and documentation early in the project. Once the requirements baseline is approved, further changes must pass through a formal change-control process. This up-front definition supports the linear sequencing of work and protects the project's scope, schedule, and cost baselines. By contrast, adaptive or agile approaches expect the business analyst to refine requirements iteratively, write lightweight user stories, and embrace ongoing change throughout development.
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Business Analysis Frameworks
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