Inclusive Thinking for BAs and PMs

A presentation at IIBA Speaker Series in in Toronto, ON, Canada by Hala Anwar

Inclusive Thinking for Business Analysts & Product Managers

Inclusive Thinking for Business Analysts & Product Managers

Agenda

Agenda

Chapter 1: Discussion

Chapter 1: Discussion

Chapter 2: Importance of Inclusive Thinking

Chapter 2: Importance of Inclusive Thinking

Curb Cut Effect

Curb Cut Effect

Chapter 3: Product Life Cycle

Chapter 3: Product Life Cycle

CHAPTER 3.1: Planning

CHAPTER 3.1: Planning

Stakeholders

Stakeholders

Guilt, Punish, Require

Guilt, Punish, Require

AODA

AODA

Disability Stats for Canada

Disability Stats for Canada

Chapter 3.2: Research

Chapter 3.2: Research

User Research

User Research

Personas

Personas

Next Billion Users

Next Billion Users

Chapter 3.3: Requirements

Chapter 3.3: Requirements

What do our users need?

What do our users need?

User Stories

User Stories

Acceptance Criteria (Web)

Acceptance Criteria (Web)

Reusing Requirements

Reusing Requirements

Chapter 3.4: Design

Chapter 3.4: Design

Inclusive Design Principles from TPG

Inclusive Design Principles from TPG

Chapter 3.5: Solution Evaluation

Chapter 3.5: Solution Evaluation

Usability Testing

Usability Testing

Prioritization

Prioritization

Chapter 4: Summary

Chapter 4: Summary

Chapter 5: Q&A

Chapter 5: Q&A

Resources

Resources

Xbox Adaptive Controller Superbowl Ad

Xbox Adaptive Controller Superbowl Ad

Accessibility bugs have long been thorns in the development team’s side since accessibility testing traditionally only took place as an afterthought near the end of the product life cycle. However, inclusive thinking really starts long before the first wireframe is sketched out or a single line of code is ever written.

Business Analysts have traditionally been trained to emphasize Business and Enterprise Change. However, with the introduction of Agile Methodologies, the focus has changed from ‘Deliverables’ to ‘Customer Collaboration and User Experience’. BAs and Product Managers need to be user-centric to build great products, but they often stop short and focus only on generic use cases.

This interactive talk will provide examples of how business analysts, and product owners can incorporate inclusive thinking into their existing toolkit (e.g. diverse personas, user stories) and start designing usable experiences that reduce the impact on the development team’s velocity.