The San Diego chapter was formally launched in September 2008. Members are from a variety of industries and have varied interests, but all are looking to network within San Diego's business analysis community.
IIBA-SD Chapter Meetings are on the third Tuesday of each month
Thank you to those of you who joined us at the Country Inn & Suites for our Network Event .
We had a good turnout it was engaging and fun and everyone has a great time.
Check out the topic and guest speaker for next month
Have you ever tried to elicit requirements from project stakeholders only to have someone ask "what is a requirement?" Are you getting the information you need clearly and in an organized fashion — or are you documenting data validation rules while still leading stakeholders to finalize scope of the project? We all know the value of engaged stakeholders. Come learn some tried and true techniques for engaging stakeholders. Karie Price will share her experiences and well-honed process of engagement to let project stakeholders know what is expected and when it is expected. Karie Price is a popular speaker who has more than a decade of Business Analysis and Project Management experience. Karie has seen project successes and failures and it is the lessons learned from both that she has fine-tuned a process for increasing the likelihood of success. Karie is a senior Business Analyst with ICW Group. One of her roles at ICW is to establish Business Analysis as a center of excellence.
Location:Mitchell International
Food Service Building
9889 Willow Creek Road
San Diego, CA 92131
Sponsored by:
International Institute of Business Analysis announces new
Corporate Membership Program
IIBA International has launched a new corporate membership program.The Corporate Membership Program provides services that help organizations improve their business analysis practices by using the knowledge and capabilities offered by IIBA.As part of corporate membership, IIBA will conduct an assessment of the organization's business analysis practices and develop a roadmap for continuous improvement. Many project failures can be directly attributed to poor requirements gathering, inadequate business analysis and inappropriate project management. Generally accepted business analysis methodologies can avoid many of these pitfalls.