Business analysis tutorials for requirements, process mapping, reporting, and better decision-making.
Explore tutorials on gathering requirements, documenting processes, working with stakeholders, analyzing workflows, building reports, and turning business needs into practical project direction.
Explore Analysis TopicsWhat you can learn
Business analysis brings together communication, structure, documentation, and problem-solving. These topics cover the work that helps teams move from ideas to clear execution.
Requirements gathering
Learn how to collect business needs, ask better questions, and turn conversations into useful project inputs.
Process mapping
Break down workflows, identify inefficiencies, and create clearer views of how work moves across teams and systems.
Documentation and reporting
Organize findings, track decisions, and present information in ways that stakeholders can actually use.
Stakeholder communication
Work across technical and non-technical teams with clearer communication, expectations, and shared priorities.
Related business and office pages
Business analysis often overlaps with reporting, planning, project work, and communication-heavy roles.
Excel Tutorials
Use spreadsheets for reporting, summaries, tracking, and day-to-day analytical work.
Microsoft Office Tutorials
Support the broader toolset used for documentation, presentations, communication, and reporting.
Project Management Training
Connect analysis work to planning, timelines, deliverables, and project coordination.
Technical Writing Tutorials
Improve clarity in documentation, requirements, and structured communication.
Leadership Tutorials
Support roles that balance analysis with collaboration, influence, and cross-team guidance.
Customer Service Tutorials
Useful for process-focused learners working in service operations, support workflows, and experience improvement.
Frequently asked questions
What does a business analyst do?
A business analyst helps teams understand problems, define needs, improve processes, and communicate requirements clearly.
Do I need technical skills for business analysis?
Not always, but it helps to understand systems, reporting tools, documentation, and how technical and business teams work together.
What tools are commonly used?
Spreadsheets, reporting tools, project software, documentation platforms, and presentation tools are all common in analysis work.