User Centered-Design (UCD) is a philosophy and a process. It is a philosophy that places the person (as opposed to the ‘thing’) at the center; it is a process that focuses on cognitive factors (such as perception, memory, learning, problem-solving, etc.) as they come into play during peoples’ interactions with things.
Today I came to Google and was amazed seeing some strange icons on the search results page. I tried some of them and it looks like you can manipulate the search result like promote, remove or even add more pages to it. I guessed it should be a new feature of Google search and came to Google blog to check if they say something. And it really is, the Google SearchWiki, as I found an article “SearchWiki: make search your own“.
I’ve registered many webinar about online PR and SEO from PRWeb. Unfortunately, they all started at 2am so I couldn’t attend. After that, they sent me links to download the presentations and reports. That’s good enough Bring them home if you are intertested:
A new interesting tool of Wordtracker that can help you find what people asks the search engines everyday. Typing question to search engines is so popular nowadays as users consider search engines the most intelligent consultants. Knowing what people are asking can really help in SEO if you can answer these questions on your site. That’s what this tool helps. Still in the lab, but it’s really cool. Check it out!
One good question with several great answers from BA Forum of LinkedIn. Yeah, LinkedIn guys are always professional, enthusiastic and straight to the point.
Question:
What is the difference between Business Requirements Specification (BRS) & Functional Requirements Specification (FRS)?
* What is your prospective about the difference between BRS & FRS?
* How does FRS differ from Solution Design and what goes in each of the document?
* Who develops BRS, FRS and Solution design? i.e BA, Developer etc!
Your help will be appreciated.
Cheers,
Anish Lakhani
Business Analyst at UniSuper Private Limited
Many businesses have a process in place to assist with project management and implementation. One opportunity for improvement involves making reasonable estimates of how big a project is and how much it is going to cost. There are many different names for tools used with this process: business needs specification, requirements specification or, simply, business requirements. Business requirements are the critical activities of an enterprise that must be performed to meet the organizational objective(s) while remaining solution independent.