Certified Business Analysis Professional

The Certified Business Analysis Professional (CBAP) designation is a professional certification and registered trademark from International Institute of Business Analysis (IIBA) granted to individuals with extensive business analysis experience. Business analysis practitioners must be accepted to sit for a three-and-a-half hour situational analysis case-study exam based on the Business Analysis Body of Knowledge (BABOK).[1] Qualified individuals are awarded the designation "Certified Business Analysis Professional" upon passing the exam.

Exam prerequisites

Applicants must possess at least five years' experience working in a business analyst capacity, with 7,500 verifiable hours of firsthand business analysis activity recorded against individual projects and specific BA tasks, spanning at least four of the six BABOK knowledge areas.[2] Candidates must have earned at least thirty-five hours of professional development in areas related to Business Analysis in the last four years. Two letters of reference from career managers or clients are required.

Recertification

Recertification is required every three years by providing evidence of sufficient ongoing professional development, business journal authorship or pro bono analysis work for nonprofits.

Recipients who attain the CBAP designation have an obligation to abide by the associated Code of Ethics.

Recipients

As of January 1, 2018, 2,839 United States recipients held the CBAP designation, with a total of 8,025 worldwide.[3]

gollark: - it funds the BBC, but you have to pay it if you watch *any* live TV, or watch BBC content online- it's per property, not per person, so if you have a license, and go somewhere without a license, and watch TV on some of your stuff, you are breaking the law (unless your thing is running entirely on battery power and not mains-connected?)- it costs about twice as much as online subscription service things- there are still black and white licenses which cost a third of the price
gollark: Very unrelated to anything, but I recently read about how TV licensing works in the UK and it's extremely weird.
gollark: "I support an increase in good things and a reduction in bad things"
gollark: Or maybe they just check it for keywords automatically, who knows.
gollark: I assume most people would agree with (most of) those things, but just saying, effectively, "more good things, fewer bad things" isn't very meaningful. Maybe that's what you're going for, but I assume they might want you to say/make up more personal-scale things.

References

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