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Chapter-II 
Succeeding as a 
Systems Analysts
Contents 
Discuss the analytical skills 
Describe the technical skills 
Discuss the management skills 
Identify the interpersonal skills
Relationship between system 
analyst’s skills and SDLC phases 
Interpersonal skills 
• Project identification and selections phase 
• Project initiation and planning phase 
Analytical skills 
• Analysis phase 
Management skills 
• Design phase 
Technical skills 
• Implementation phase 
• Maintenance phase
Analytical skills 
for System analysts 
We will focus on four sets of analytical 
skills. They are: 
– System thinking 
– Organizational knowledge 
– Problem identification 
– Problem analyzing and solving
Analytical skills for System analysts: 
1. System thinking 
Systems and its characteristics 
– System is an interrelated set of components, with identifiable 
boundary, working together for some purpose 
 A system has nine characteristics: 
– Components----------------------Subsystems 
– Interrelated components 
– A boundary 
– A purpose 
– An environment 
– Interfaces 
– Input 
– Output 
– Constraints
Input 
Interrelationship 
Components 
Output 
Environment 
Boundary 
Interface
System characteristics 
A component 
• an irreducible part or aggregation of parts 
that make up a system, also called a 
subsystem 
Interrelated components 
• Dependence of one subsystem on one or 
more subsystems 
Boundary 
• The line that marks the inside and outside 
of a system and that sets off the system 
form its environment
System characteristics 
Purpose 
• The overall goal or function of a system 
Environment 
• Everything external to a system that 
interacts with the system 
Interface 
• Point of contact where a system meets its 
environment or where subsystems meet 
each other.
System characteristics 
Constraint 
• A limit to what a system can accomplish 
Input 
• Whatever a system takes from its 
environment in order to fulfill its purpose 
Output 
• Whatever a system returns from its 
environment in order to fulfill its purpose
A fast food restaurant as a system: Example 
Environments: customers, food distribution, banks, etc. 
Dining 
Room 
Storage Office 
Kitchens 
Contour 
Inputs: 
Food 
,labor, 
cash, 
etc. 
Boundary 
Outputs: 
Prepared 
food 
Trash 
Etc. 
interrelationship
Open and Closed systems 
Open system 
• A system that interacts freely with its 
environment, taking input and returning 
output 
Closed system 
• A system that is cut off from its 
environment and does not interact with it
Logical and Physical system 
description 
Logical system description 
• Description of a system that focuses on the 
system function and purpose without regard to 
how the system will physically implemented 
Physical system description 
• Description of a system that focuses on the how 
the system will be materially constructed
Benefiting from systems thinking 
• The first step in systems thinking is to be able to 
identify something as a system. 
• Identify where the boundary lies and all of the 
relevant inputs 
• Visualizing a set of things and their relationship as 
system allows you to translate a specify physical 
situation into more general. 
• By decomposition 
– The system into subsystems, we can analyze each 
subsystem separately and discover if one or more 
subsystem is at capacity. 
– Its enabled us to determine its problem with 
demand
Customer Kitchen 
4.0 
Produce 
Management 
report 
Update 
Goods sold 
file 
Kitchen order 
Update 
Inventory 
file 
Process 
Customer 
Food order 
Goods sold 
file 
Restaurant 
manger 
1.0 
2.0 3.0 
Formatted 
Goods 
sold 
data 
Daily goods sold amount 
Inventory file 
Management report 
Goods 
Sold 
Inventory data 
Daily inventory 
Depletion amounts 
Customer order 
Receipt 
*Data flow diagram for fast food restaurant IS
Organizational skills 
Analyst should understand 
– how organizations work 
• Polices 
• Terminologies, abbreviations, and acronyms 
• Short/long term strategy and plans 
• Role of technology 
• The functions and procedures of the particular 
organization you are working for 
– How the department operates, 
• its purpose, 
• its relationship with other department 
• its relationship with customers and suppliers 
– Who the experts are in different subject 
areas
Problem Identification skills 
(Pound 1969) Problem is the 
difference between an existing 
(current) situation and desired 
(output) situation. 
– The process of identifying problems is the 
process of defining differences, so problem 
solving is the process of finding a way to 
reduce differences. 
– Analyst should able to compare the current in 
an organization to the desired situation.
Problem analyzing and 
solving Skills
Important system concepts 
There are several other system 
concepts with which systems 
analysts need to become familiar: 
• Decomposition 
• Modularity 
• Coupling 
• Cohesion
Decomposition 
Definition: The process of breaking 
down a system into smaller component 
– The purpose of decomposition is to allow 
the system analysts to: 
• Break a system into small, manageable 
subsystem 
• Focus on one are at a time 
– Concentrate one component pertinent to 
one group of users 
– Build different components at independent 
times
Modularity and Coupling 
Modularity 
– Dividing a system up into chunks or modules of a 
relatively uniform size. To Simplify the redesign and 
rebuild process 
Coupling 
– The extend to which subsystems depend on each 
other. 
– Subsystem should be independent as possible. If one 
subsystem fails and other subsystem are highly 
dependent on it, then the other will either fail 
themselves or have problems functioning
Cohesion 
A cohesion is the extent to which a 
subsystem performs a single 
function.
Technical Skills (1) 
Many aspects of your job as a system 
analyst are technically oriented. 
The following activities will help you stay 
up-to-date: 
– Read trade publications 
– Join professional societies 
– Attend classes or teach at a local college 
– Attend many courses or training sessions 
offered by your organizations 
– Attend professional conferences, seminars, 
or trade shows 
– Participate in electronic bulletin, new groups
Technical Skills (2) 
You should be familiar as possible with 
information technology: 
– Microcomputer, micro station, workstation, 
mainframe computers 
– Programming languages 
– Operating systems 
– Database and file management systems 
– Data communication standards 
– Software for local and wide networks 
– Web developing tools 
– Decision support system generators 
– Data analysis tools 
– Data design tools
Management Skills 
System analysts are almost always 
members of project teams and are 
frequently asked to lead team. 
Management skills are very useful for 
anyone in a leadership role. 
There are four class of management 
skills: 
– 1- Resources 
– 2- Project 
– 3- Risk 
– 4- Change management
1- Resource management 
Includes: 
– Predicting resources usage (budgeting) 
– Tracking and accounting for resources 
consumption 
– Learning how to use resources effectively 
– Securing resources from abusive use 
– Evaluating the quality of resources used
Assignment 
Describe your university or college 
as a system. 
– What is the input? 
– What is output? 
– What is the boundary? 
– What is the components and their 
relationship? 
– The constraint 
– The environment 
Draw a diagram of this system
Assignment 
Describe yourself in terms of your 
abilities at each of the following 
interpersonal kills: working alone verse 
working with a team, interviewing, 
listening, writing, presenting, facilitating 
a group, and margining expectations. 
Where are your strengths and 
weakness? Why? What can you do to 
capitalize on your strengths and 
strengths areas where you are weak?
Interpersonal skills 
Communication skills 
Interviewing, Listening, and questionnaires 
Written and oral presentations 
– Meeting agenda 
– Meeting minutes 
– Interview summaries 
– Requests for proposal from contractors and vendors 
Working alone and with a team 
Facilitating groups 
Managing exceptions

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Role of system analyst

  • 1. Chapter-II Succeeding as a Systems Analysts
  • 2. Contents Discuss the analytical skills Describe the technical skills Discuss the management skills Identify the interpersonal skills
  • 3. Relationship between system analyst’s skills and SDLC phases Interpersonal skills • Project identification and selections phase • Project initiation and planning phase Analytical skills • Analysis phase Management skills • Design phase Technical skills • Implementation phase • Maintenance phase
  • 4. Analytical skills for System analysts We will focus on four sets of analytical skills. They are: – System thinking – Organizational knowledge – Problem identification – Problem analyzing and solving
  • 5. Analytical skills for System analysts: 1. System thinking Systems and its characteristics – System is an interrelated set of components, with identifiable boundary, working together for some purpose  A system has nine characteristics: – Components----------------------Subsystems – Interrelated components – A boundary – A purpose – An environment – Interfaces – Input – Output – Constraints
  • 6. Input Interrelationship Components Output Environment Boundary Interface
  • 7. System characteristics A component • an irreducible part or aggregation of parts that make up a system, also called a subsystem Interrelated components • Dependence of one subsystem on one or more subsystems Boundary • The line that marks the inside and outside of a system and that sets off the system form its environment
  • 8. System characteristics Purpose • The overall goal or function of a system Environment • Everything external to a system that interacts with the system Interface • Point of contact where a system meets its environment or where subsystems meet each other.
  • 9. System characteristics Constraint • A limit to what a system can accomplish Input • Whatever a system takes from its environment in order to fulfill its purpose Output • Whatever a system returns from its environment in order to fulfill its purpose
  • 10. A fast food restaurant as a system: Example Environments: customers, food distribution, banks, etc. Dining Room Storage Office Kitchens Contour Inputs: Food ,labor, cash, etc. Boundary Outputs: Prepared food Trash Etc. interrelationship
  • 11. Open and Closed systems Open system • A system that interacts freely with its environment, taking input and returning output Closed system • A system that is cut off from its environment and does not interact with it
  • 12. Logical and Physical system description Logical system description • Description of a system that focuses on the system function and purpose without regard to how the system will physically implemented Physical system description • Description of a system that focuses on the how the system will be materially constructed
  • 13. Benefiting from systems thinking • The first step in systems thinking is to be able to identify something as a system. • Identify where the boundary lies and all of the relevant inputs • Visualizing a set of things and their relationship as system allows you to translate a specify physical situation into more general. • By decomposition – The system into subsystems, we can analyze each subsystem separately and discover if one or more subsystem is at capacity. – Its enabled us to determine its problem with demand
  • 14. Customer Kitchen 4.0 Produce Management report Update Goods sold file Kitchen order Update Inventory file Process Customer Food order Goods sold file Restaurant manger 1.0 2.0 3.0 Formatted Goods sold data Daily goods sold amount Inventory file Management report Goods Sold Inventory data Daily inventory Depletion amounts Customer order Receipt *Data flow diagram for fast food restaurant IS
  • 15. Organizational skills Analyst should understand – how organizations work • Polices • Terminologies, abbreviations, and acronyms • Short/long term strategy and plans • Role of technology • The functions and procedures of the particular organization you are working for – How the department operates, • its purpose, • its relationship with other department • its relationship with customers and suppliers – Who the experts are in different subject areas
  • 16. Problem Identification skills (Pound 1969) Problem is the difference between an existing (current) situation and desired (output) situation. – The process of identifying problems is the process of defining differences, so problem solving is the process of finding a way to reduce differences. – Analyst should able to compare the current in an organization to the desired situation.
  • 17. Problem analyzing and solving Skills
  • 18. Important system concepts There are several other system concepts with which systems analysts need to become familiar: • Decomposition • Modularity • Coupling • Cohesion
  • 19. Decomposition Definition: The process of breaking down a system into smaller component – The purpose of decomposition is to allow the system analysts to: • Break a system into small, manageable subsystem • Focus on one are at a time – Concentrate one component pertinent to one group of users – Build different components at independent times
  • 20. Modularity and Coupling Modularity – Dividing a system up into chunks or modules of a relatively uniform size. To Simplify the redesign and rebuild process Coupling – The extend to which subsystems depend on each other. – Subsystem should be independent as possible. If one subsystem fails and other subsystem are highly dependent on it, then the other will either fail themselves or have problems functioning
  • 21. Cohesion A cohesion is the extent to which a subsystem performs a single function.
  • 22. Technical Skills (1) Many aspects of your job as a system analyst are technically oriented. The following activities will help you stay up-to-date: – Read trade publications – Join professional societies – Attend classes or teach at a local college – Attend many courses or training sessions offered by your organizations – Attend professional conferences, seminars, or trade shows – Participate in electronic bulletin, new groups
  • 23. Technical Skills (2) You should be familiar as possible with information technology: – Microcomputer, micro station, workstation, mainframe computers – Programming languages – Operating systems – Database and file management systems – Data communication standards – Software for local and wide networks – Web developing tools – Decision support system generators – Data analysis tools – Data design tools
  • 24. Management Skills System analysts are almost always members of project teams and are frequently asked to lead team. Management skills are very useful for anyone in a leadership role. There are four class of management skills: – 1- Resources – 2- Project – 3- Risk – 4- Change management
  • 25. 1- Resource management Includes: – Predicting resources usage (budgeting) – Tracking and accounting for resources consumption – Learning how to use resources effectively – Securing resources from abusive use – Evaluating the quality of resources used
  • 26. Assignment Describe your university or college as a system. – What is the input? – What is output? – What is the boundary? – What is the components and their relationship? – The constraint – The environment Draw a diagram of this system
  • 27. Assignment Describe yourself in terms of your abilities at each of the following interpersonal kills: working alone verse working with a team, interviewing, listening, writing, presenting, facilitating a group, and margining expectations. Where are your strengths and weakness? Why? What can you do to capitalize on your strengths and strengths areas where you are weak?
  • 28. Interpersonal skills Communication skills Interviewing, Listening, and questionnaires Written and oral presentations – Meeting agenda – Meeting minutes – Interview summaries – Requests for proposal from contractors and vendors Working alone and with a team Facilitating groups Managing exceptions