Business analyst portfolio website builder

Build a business analyst
portfolio from your resume.

The short answer

The fastest way for a business analyst to build a portfolio website is to paste an existing BA resume into Portfolio, which reads your skills, tools, and certifications and drafts a clean, artifacts-first site in about a minute. You then choose a structured single-column design, add two or three sanitised case blocks, confirm no confidential requirement or real data slipped in, and publish to your own domain. It is a better fit than a generic drag-and-drop builder because it starts from your resume and produces a matched, ATS-safe resume alongside the site, which is the document that still does most of the screening for BA roles.

Paste a resume, start free See what to include
Comparison

Three ways to build it.

A business analyst can build a portfolio by hand, in a generic website builder, or by pasting a resume into Portfolio. Here is how the three compare on the things that matter to a BA applicant.

What a BA needsBy handGeneric site builderPortfolio
Time to first draftHours to daysAn evening of setupAbout a minute
Built from your BA resumeNo, you write it allNo, an empty canvasYes, paste and go
Skills and certs placed firstIf you design it that wayYou lay it out yourselfStructured that way by default
Room for artifact case blocksYou build each oneGeneric content blocksBlock page builder, ready to use
Matched ATS-safe resumeSeparate toolNo48 layouts, live scoring
Custom domain with TLSManual hosting setupOn paid plansOn every plan, automatic
Reads on the first crawlDepends how you hostOften client-renderedServer-rendered HTML

A generic builder is the right call if you want a fully custom visual layout and enjoy building it. For a resume-driven, artifacts-first BA site done in a minute, that is what Portfolio is for.

How it works

From resume to site, for a BA.

The build is the same paste-and-edit flow, with the sections a business analyst needs already in the right order. Here is the exact sequence.

STEP 01Paste your resume

Drop in your BA resume or a LinkedIn export. The parser pulls out your skills, tools, certifications, and domain experience.

STEP 02It drafts the pages

You get an about page, a skills and certifications block, an experience section, and contact, each grounded in what your resume actually says.

STEP 03Add sanitised case blocks

Use the block page builder to add two to four artifact cases, a process map, a requirements sample, each anonymised with no confidential detail.

STEP 04Publish to your domain

Connect a custom domain and Portfolio issues TLS automatically. The pages ship as real HTML a recruiter or an AI answer engine can read.

The same paste also produces a matched resume with a live ATS score, which is the document most company systems screen first.

ATS keywords

Words to keep in the resume.

The builder produces a resume as well as a site. Make sure the competencies a BA recruiter searches are present in it, in the exact terms they use.

Business Analystrequirements gatheringuser storiesprocess mappingSQLstakeholder managementBRDAgileJiradata analysisTableauPower BIgap analysisuse casesCBAPUAT

Run the finished resume through the free ATS score checker against a real posting before you apply.

Design fit

Designs that suit a BA.

Of the 60 designs and 48 resume layouts, these are the ones to reach for, and the ones to skip, for a business analyst site.

Reach forA clean, structured design

A single accent colour, clear headings, and a top-of-page skills and certifications block. It reads as precise to a hiring manager scanning for the competencies a BA role needs.

SkipThe decorative gallery designs

Gallery designs built for visual portfolios lead with full-bleed images and push text down. They bury the specifications and outcomes a BA reviewer reads for first.

Resume layoutSingle-column, not two-column

A two-column resume can parse into a scrambled order in a company system. A single-column layout keeps your experience in reading order when it is screened.

Case blocksThe block page builder

Use the block page builder to lay out each sanitised artifact case as its own unit: the problem, the analysis, the recommendation, and the measured outcome, kept clean and scannable.

Honest fit

When the builder is the wrong tool.

Portfolio is a resume-to-website builder, not a fit for every BA situation. Here is where it helps and where a different route wins.

Use the builder if you

  • +
    Are an independent or contract BA who wins work directly and wants a site from your resume without an evening of layout work.
  • +
    Are moving toward product owner, product manager, or systems analysis and want a presentable body of analysis work.
  • +
    Are changing industries and need to show transferable analysis skill, or do consulting work where a portfolio wins trust.
  • +
    Want the matched ATS-safe resume the same paste produces alongside the site.

Choose another route if you

  • Only apply through a company internal Workday or Greenhouse portal, where an external site is rarely opened at screening.
  • Are placed by an agency that submits a standardised profile for you. Fix that profile first.
  • Would be tempted to expose confidential requirements or real data. If in doubt, leave it out and lean on the resume.
  • Are on a deadline. Fix the resume for the ATS first, then build the site after.
FAQ

Building a BA site.

The practical questions business analysts ask before they build.

What is the best portfolio builder for a business analyst?

The best builder for a BA is one that starts from your resume and orders the page around skills, certifications, and sanitised artifacts, because that is how a hiring manager reads. Portfolio does this and produces a matched, ATS-safe resume alongside the site. A generic drag-and-drop builder can also work if you are willing to lay out the skills block and case studies yourself and do not need the resume.

Do I need to know how to code to build a BA portfolio?

No. You paste your resume, edit the drafted text, add case blocks with the block page builder, choose a design, and publish. Portfolio handles hosting and the TLS certificate for your custom domain. There is no HTML or CSS to write, and no template to wrestle into shape.

Can I show real requirements documents or data in the site?

Not the real ones. Anything produced for an employer or client is usually confidential and often under NDA, so keep it out of both the resume and the site. Recreate a sanitised sample instead, with generic role names and invented figures, and never publish an unredacted query or an extract of live data. The builder only uses what you give it, so the responsibility to anonymise sits with you before you paste.

Can I connect my own domain?

Yes, on every plan, and Portfolio issues the TLS certificate automatically. A domain in your own name reads as more established than a free subdomain and is easy to add to a proposal, a LinkedIn profile, or a direct application.

How long does it take to build a BA portfolio?

The first full draft appears in about a minute after you paste your resume. Editing the copy, building two or three sanitised case blocks, and choosing a design usually takes another thirty to forty minutes. Connecting a custom domain adds a few minutes while DNS propagates.

The page walkthrough

Landing, work, and about for a BA.

A business analyst sits between the people who want something and the people who build it. A portfolio has to prove you can translate in both directions. Here is what to put in each part of the page so a hiring manager sees that quickly.

The landing section: your translation range

Open with the domains you know and the methods you use. A business analyst is hired for a mix of business fluency and technical precision, so the landing should signal both: the industries you have worked, and the tools of the trade, requirements documentation, process mapping, and the query skills that let you check your own assumptions against data.

The work section: one requirement, end to end

The most convincing thing a BA can show is a single problem carried from a vague business ask to a shipped change. Pick one: the stakeholder question you started with, the current-state process you mapped, the requirements you wrote, and what changed once it was built. A reader wants to see that you can hold ambiguity at the front and precision at the back.

What a hiring manager checks

The first read is for whether you reduce risk. A good BA prevents the expensive kind of mistake, the feature built to the wrong spec, by asking the right questions early and writing them down unambiguously. Show one artefact that proves this: a crisp acceptance criterion, a process diagram that exposed a gap, a decision log that kept a project honest.

Keeping employer data out

Requirements and process maps often contain proprietary detail. Abstract the domain, generalise the process, and drop internal system names you were asked to protect. The method transfers; the confidential specifics do not need to.

The about section: how you think

Reserve the about section for your approach to ambiguity and stakeholders. A hiring manager is deciding whether you will be the calm centre of a messy project, and that judgment comes from how you describe your process, not from another list of tools.

Get started

Paste a resume.
Get a BA site.

Start free. Drop in your BA resume and get a clean, artifacts-first website plus a matched ATS-safe resume in about a minute. Add sanitised case blocks and connect your own domain when you are ready.