The best methodology isn't Scrum or Waterfall. It's Value-Driven Analysis . The best practice isn't documenting everything. It's asking the right question before anyone builds the wrong thing. As Maya often said: "Your job isn't to give stakeholders what they want. It's to give them what they actually need—and then prove they asked for it."
The Context: A large logistics company, "LogiTrack," decided to overhaul its aging shipment tracking system. The project had a $5 million budget and an aggressive 12-month timeline. The stakeholders—operations, sales, and IT—were all stressed. Drivers were losing packages, customers couldn’t see real-time updates, and managers were flying blind. business analysis best practices and methodologies
Maya created a Requirements Traceability Matrix (RTM) linking every "should have" to a measurable acceptance criterion. For real-time tracking: "Given a driver scans a package, when 10 seconds pass, then the customer portal reflects the new location." The best methodology isn't Scrum or Waterfall
The company hired a seasoned Business Analyst named Maya. But within two weeks, Maya noticed a terrifying pattern. It's asking the right question before anyone builds
Silence. Then the Director laughed. "You tricked me into success."