Program start date | Application deadline |
2025-02-01 | - |
2025-06-01 | - |
2025-10-01 | - |
Program Overview
Diploma of Business Analytics
Key Information
Duration
8 to 12 months
Intake Dates
February, June, October
Campus Location
Melbourne
2025 Domestic Fees
A$26,336
FEE-Help available
2025 International Fees
A$37,592
CRICOS M
Course Overview
Join the digital revolution
Start your journey to a career at the forefront of the digital revolution with our new Diploma of Business Analytics program. Learn how to solve today’s most pressing business challenges and take advantage of cutting-edge data analytics tools, techniques and software in this career in demand.
As you progress to the Bachelor of Business Analytics, you’ll develop a combination of problem-solving, critical-thinking and communication skills across business, marketing, commerce and technology. You’ll gain valuable experience with industry-standard programs, so you’ll have the skills and adaptability to succeed in a wide variety of workplaces.
Degree Pathway
Gain direct entry into 2nd year of:
- Bachelor of Business Analytics
- Bachelor of Business
- Bachelor of Commerce
Course Structure
What you’ll be studying
Throughout your Diploma of Business Analytics, you will study a total of eight units before graduation and articulating into the degree program. The Diploma consists of 6 core units and 2 elective units.
- Data Analytics Concepts (BBUS1001)
Any modern business today will utilise some form of spreadsheet tool to
review, manipulate and visualise data (in the form of charts for reporting). A
spreadsheet tool also enables one to undertake advanced tasks on business
data, such as performing scenario analyses and undertaking complex data
analytics, for example creating a forecasting model. In this subject, you will
learn how to use two technological tools to undertake data analysis. The first
tool is Structure Query Language (SQL), which we will use to pull relevant
data into Excel and facilitate further analysis. Next, various advanced Excel
analyses including pivot tables, statistical analysis, and creation of basic
forecasting models will be covered. Upon successful completion of this
subject, you will be proficient in basic data analysis using Excel and SQL,
setting you up to become an analytical and data driven problem solver. With
these skills, you will also be ready to identify insights allowing you to
disrupt typical business operations systematically and with a higher chance of
success.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Economic Issues & Public Policy (BBUS1IEI)
Economics is the study of human behaviour and in particular the choices that
individuals, businesses, and governments make to deal with scarcity and the
incentives that guide those choices. In Investigating Economic Issues, you
will learn how the forces of demand and supply coordinate the behaviour of
individuals and businesses in the market and how government policy affects
those market outcomes. You will study the decisions that businesses make in
determining how much to produce and at what cost. Further you will investigate
how the market structure affects firms’ choices. At the macro level, you will
explain how to measure economic activity, including levels of inflation and
unemployment, and you will examine some of the factors that influence these
variables and the impact they have on business.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Organisational Behaviour (BMGT1OBE)
Organisational Behaviour will introduce individual characteristics,
interpersonal relationships, and group processes, as they relate to individual
behaviour and outcomes in organisations. Organisational behaviour theory and
concepts will be applied to current organisational problems relating to
motivation, decision-making, teamwork, leadership, and diversity. In the
workshops students will develop the capabilities to work effectively in teams
and lead teams to achieve their goals.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Programming Environment/Programming for Engineers and Scientists (TCSE1PEXS)
In this subject, students learn and apply fundamental programming concepts.
Students analyse, design, construct and document solutions to simple
programming problems. Java programs are developed using command line interface
tools and Unix operating system.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (5 hours)
- Lecture – 1 hour per week
- Lab/Workshop time – 4 hours per week
- Sustainability (BBUS1SBY)
This subject introduces you to the concept of sustainability, and a systems
approach to understanding the complex interactions between the environmental,
economic, and social dimensions of sustainability. The subject attracts
students from a range of fields, bringing a multidisciplinary team perspective
to the researching, analysis, and problem-solving aspects of creating positive
change for sustainability. In teams, you are required to critique, design, and
present an action plan aimed at resolving a sustainability issue that impacts
current and future generations. This subject provides you with the opportunity
to enhance, demonstrate and document work-ready skills appropriate to your
chosen career path.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Disruption in Business (BBUS1DIB)
BBUS1DIB Disruption in Business
Traditional business models are being disrupted by numerous factors. Chief
among them are new technologies that change how businesses operate. One
commonality observed among these disruptive trends is the role of data. Data
has become a highly valued business asset, forming a strong foundation for
high-quality decision processes. This subject will introduce you to the role
of data in disrupting traditional business operations and formulating business
strategies. You will gain an appreciation of how data can be turned into
business insights through a process called analytics, using examples across a
range of business problems. On completion of this subject, you will appreciate
the pivotal role that data and analytics play in various strategic initiatives
within organizations, and the strategies that link analytics to business
performance while balancing issues such as ethical and data governance.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
2 electives from
- Fundamentals of Marketing (BMKT1MSD)
An introductory subject to marketing principles and practice as applied to
mainly fast-moving consumer goods. A key focus of this subject will be
development of communication and presentation skills that are integral to the
marketing profession and success in business. Through the integration of these
skills within the subject, you will develop transferable skills that will used
throughout your business career to engage with a range of stakeholders. Topics
will cover the marketing concept, the marketing environment, buying behaviour
in consumer and organisational markets, customer segmentation, targeting and
positioning, developing the marketing mix, and the implementation and control
of marketing programs. This subject provides a sound foundation for future
marketing subjects, advanced skill-development, and your career.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Fundamentals of Accounting (BACC1AMD)
This subject provides you with an understanding of accounting process and
application in the business environment. The subject covers the conceptual
framework underlying accounting practices and the application of accounting
information systems in the process of recording and reporting business
transactions. After studying this subject, you will be enabled to use
accounting information to make business decisions and judgments incorporating
both technical knowledge and ethical principles.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Introduction to International Business (BMGT1IB)
This is an introductory unit in international business, designed to provide
students both with the foundations necessary to commence and to continue their
degree in international business and with a comprehensive understanding of the
issues facing firms in international markets. The unit broadly covers all
facets of international business and is divided into five main themes: 1)
globalisation, 2) country differences, 3) the global trade and investment
environment, 4) the strategy and structure of international business, and 5)
business operations. Students will develop cultural awareness, fluency and
competence, develop the capacity to evaluate the global environment, and to
analyse the issues in global operation with theories of international
business.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Introduction to Business and Company Law (BLST2001)
This subject explores the core principles of contract law, consumer protection
and the law of negligence, and examines business structures including the law
relating to the incorporation of companies. This subject also introduces
students to ethical standards that apply to business activities, such as
contractual relationships and special legal protections against unethical
business practices and examines the practical operation of the law in the
business environment. This subject adopts a skills-based learning approach
through teaching the basic techniques of problem solving and promoting an
understanding of the dynamic nature of the law in business and corporations.
These skills prepare students for more advanced law subjects as well as their
professional careers.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Introduction to Tourism Hospitality and Events
This subject introduces you to concepts, theories and terminology involved in
an academic study of tourism, hospitality and events. It provides you with a
comprehensive overview of the tourism and hospitality industry in Australia.
It provides you with an awareness of the breadth of the industry and of the
interests and activities it encompasses. You will examine various components
of the industry, with a particular focus on the nature of its organisation and
the sort of data and information it generates. This subject provides a
foundation for you to make informed choices about future subjects and
potential career options
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
- Fundamentals of Finance
The aim of the subject is both to provide background information and
understanding of the concepts and importance of finance to all students, as
well as to suitably prepare students for future subjects comprising a major
stream or degree program in finance. The content of the subject will cover the
nature of the financial environment and the types of financial decision-making
required from both a business and individual perspective. The subject further
develops the concept of the time value of money, methods of valuing various
financial assets such as shares and bonds, methods of project evaluation and
the determination of a firm’s cost of capital. The subject also focuses on the
trade-off between risk and return in relation to financial assets to provide
an understanding of modern portfolio theory. The subject also introduces
students to the theoretical concepts and empirical testing of capital market
efficiency, and to the concepts and terminology associated with options.
Class requirements
Timetabled hours per week (4 hours)
- One 2-hour lecture per week
- One 2-hour tutorial per week
Popular career paths
Employment and career options after completing your Bachelor’s degree:
- Data scientist
- Business analyst.
- Management consultant
- Innovation consultant
- Asset investment analyst
Entry requirements
View entry requirements for domestic and international students.
View requirements