Task Mappings

Tasks Description
Conduct Elicitation This task involves gathering information from stakeholders to understand their needs and requirements.
Analyze Current State This task focuses on assessing the current state of the system or process to identify areas for improvement.
Specify and Model Requirements In this task, requirements are documented and modeled to ensure clear and comprehensive understanding.

Purpose

A concept model is used to organize the business vocabulary needed to consistently and thoroughly communicate the knowledge of a domain.

Description

A concept model starts with a glossary, which typically focuses on the core noun concepts of a domain. Concept models put a premium on high-quality, design- independent definitions that are free of data or implementation biases. Concept models also emphasize rich vocabulary.

A concept model identifies the correct choice of terms to use in communications, including all business analysis information. It is especially important where high precision and subtle distinctions need to be made.

Concept models can be effective where:

Elements

.1 Noun Concepts

The most basic concepts in a concept model are the noun concepts of the domain, which are simply ‘givens’ for the space.

.2 Verb Concepts

Verb concepts provide basic structural connections between noun concepts. These verb concepts are given standard wordings, so they can be referenced unambiguously. These wordings by themselves are not necessarily sentences; rather, they are the building blocks of sentences (such as business rule statements). Sometimes verb concepts are derived, inferred, or computed by definitional rules. This is how new knowledge or information is built up from more basic facts.

.3 Other Connections

Since concept models must support rich meaning (semantics), other types of standard connections are used besides verb concepts.