What’s your hidden superpower?
Creativity? Hawk-like hearing? Maybe the ability to always be barefoot at the exact moment a rogue Lego piece appears on the floor? (Ow, we’ve all been there.)
For businesses in the real world, their hidden superpower is analysis.
Modern companies the world over are using the power of analysis to become more efficient. A great business analyst increases profit margins and identifies compliance gaps, ultimately paving the way for businesses to beat their competition.
By the end of this course, you’ll be able to:
• Define and identify the benefits of business analysis
• Recognize how analysis can support and encourage business innovation
• Demonstrate ways of levering business analysis to drive your company forward
Why take this course?
This course is for leaders and business owners in any industry who want to better understand the role of business analysis, and harness its power to make them stand out.
When it comes to business innovation, the devil is in the details. Ideas can come from anywhere, but only through analysis are you able to spot gaps, find solutions, add value, and continually bring about innovation in your business.
10 mins | SCORM | Takeaway Tasks


Internships offer usually one discipline-specific, supervised, structured paid or unpaid, and for academic credit work experience or practice placement.
Work Experience intersperses one or two work terms (typically full-time) into an academic program, where work terms provide experience in a workplace setting related to the student’s field of study and/or career goals.
Community Service Learning (CSL) integrates meaningful community service with classroom instruction and critical reflection to enrich the learning experience and strengthen communities. In practice, students work in partnership with a community-based organization to apply their disciplinary knowledge to a challenge identified by the community.
Field Placement provides students with an intensive part-time/short term intensive hands-on practical experience in a setting relevant to their subject of study. Field placements may not require supervision of a registered or licensed professional and the completed work experience hours are not required for professional certification. Field placements account for work-integrated educational experiences not encompassed by other forms, such as co-op, clinic, practicum, and internship.

