Which is where we BAs come in. Our job is to be trusted advisers, and one area where we can establish trust is to help our stakeholders understand language that might be confusing to them. In order words, we can establish trust by translating technical complexity into business language. We BAs have always done this. We take customer requirements and translate them into something the technical folks can understand…and vice versa.
But what about translating in the digital world? We still need to translate, but it’s different. It’s more complex. Here’s an example. Let’s say that I’m a business stakeholder talking to a data scientist who wants me to make business decisions that will feed into a predictive model. And let’s say that that she asks me questions like–
And let’s say that I have no idea what she’s talking about. As she’s asking me for answers, I’m thinking, “What in the world is an ETL? What’s currency? How would I know the size of the data set? What is disparity? What do these scales mean? Cohort statistical analysis—are you kidding me?!”
As a business stakeholder, what should I do? Here are some possibilities:
Of course, I’d rather not be in that situation. I’d rather have someone in the room or on the phone who understood what was being said and could tell me what it all meant. Someone who could simplify it for me.
Someone like a BA.
As a business stakeholder, I don’t care about the details. I want to know why something is needed, and it sure would be nice to have someone I trust in the meeting or on the call with me who could help me understand what is being said and why it’s important. Someone who could tell me, for example, not only that an ETL is a process used to get data from one or more databases to another, but also that it’s needed to maintain the integrity of the data that will be used to train the models. And importantly, the ramifications of having inaccurate data. That means, of course, that we BAs need to do our homework.
We need to do prep work prior to any meeting between the data scientist and the business stakeholder.
We need to find out which questions will be asked. If we don’t understand any of the terms, we need to research them.
We need to find out which business decisions are needed.
And we need to make sure we think about the impacts of those decisions to be able to advise our stakeholders about decisions they’re being asked to make and the impacts of all possible responses.
We need to be sure that the stakeholder is protected, which means we need to figure out a way to stop the questions until the stakeholder has been able to digest them. Ideally, we would have a conversation with the data scientist about our role and this process in advance of any meeting.
If this seems like a lot of work, it is! But prep work is part of what we do to establish trust. It gives us credibility. It gives one more reason for our stakeholders value to us and one more way for us to provide value to them. Which, after all, is what we do.
[i] The first four questions are from: Kate Strachnyi, May 14, 2018, 20 Questions to Ask Prior to Starting Data Analysis, Towards Data Science, https://towardsdatascience.com/20-questions-to-ask-prior-to-starting-data-analysis-6ec11d6a504b
[ii] The last two questions are from Sandra Durcevic, Jan 8, 2019, Your Data Won’t Speak Unless You Ask It the Right Data Analysis Questions, https://www.datapine.com/blog/data-analysis-questions/
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