Technical Business Analyst

Premier IT
London, United Kingdom
2 weeks ago
£60,000 – £70,000 pa

Salary

£60,000 – £70,000 pa

Posted
30 Mar 2026 (2 weeks ago)

Senior Data Business Analyst

London / Reading – Once a week in the office

£60,000 – £90,000

SQL / Data Analysis / NHS Consulting / NHS Data Strategy

I’m currently working with a fast-growing data and technology consultancy who are looking to add Senior and Principal Data Business Analysts to their expanding delivery team. The company work with organisations across multiple sectors including telecommunications, financial services and healthcare, helping them shape and deliver modern data strategies and platforms.

As part of a client-facing consulting team, you will work on a variety of data transformation projects within the NHS where you will help organisations better understand, structure and utilise their data. The role will involve working closely with both technical teams and business stakeholders to translate requirements into actionable data solutions and deliver measurable business value.

The offices are based in London OR Reading and would be looking for once a week in the office.

Key Responsibilities

• Assess and document current data ecosystems including architecture, governance and processes

• Translate business requirements into clear data and technical solutions

• Work closely with engineers, architects and client teams to deliver end-to-end data projects

• Analyse and explore NHS data using SQL to generate insights and validate assumptions

• Present complex data findings in a clear and engaging way to stakeholders

• Produce high-quality documentation including requirements, process maps and data definitions

• Support backlog creation, user story development and prioritisation in agile environments

• Drive adoption and best practices across key projects

Experience Required

• Proven experience as a Data Business Analyst, Data Consultant or similar role

• Strong SQL skills with the ability to analyse complex datasets

• Experience working in a NHS data-driven environments with complex systems and architectures

• Ability to bridge the gap between business and technical teams

• Experience gathering and translating requirements into clear documentation

• Strong stakeholder management and communication skills

• Experience working in consulting or client-facing environments

Nice to Have

• Experience within healthcare sector

• Understanding of data modelling concepts and data governance frameworks

• Exposure to modern data platforms and cloud environments

• Experience working in agile delivery teams

Salary: £60,000 – £90,000

Benefits: Flexible Working, Bonus, Health & Wellbeing Support, Learning & Development, Pension

If this role sounds of interest, please apply and I can give you a call.

Tim Stock

(phone number removed) | (phone number removed)

(url removed)

(url removed)

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Senior Data Manager

Randstad Technologies Recruitment Manchester, United Kingdom
£55 – £80 ph

Risk IT Business Analyst

Hays Technology London, City And County Of the City Of London, United Kingdom
£550 – £600 pd

IT Projects Business Analysis JG3 - 1SHLJP00009971

Huxley Associates London, United Kingdom
£650 – £950 pd

Senior Data Manager | 11812-1

Randstad Technologies Recruitment Manchester, United Kingdom
£60 – £61 ph

BI Analyst

Hays Technology Northampton, Northamptonshire, United Kingdom
£53,000 – £65,000 pa

Technical Systems Analyst (ECB Onboarding, Risk / ESG)

GCS London, United Kingdom
£500 – £850 pd

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Where to Advertise Data Science Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Advertising data science jobs in the UK requires a different approach to most technical hiring. Data science spans a broad and often misunderstood spectrum — from statistical modelling and experimental design through to machine learning engineering, product analytics and AI research. The strongest candidates identify firmly with specific subdisciplines and are frustrated by adverts that conflate data scientist with data analyst, business intelligence developer or machine learning engineer. General job boards produce high application volumes for data roles but consistently fail to match specialist data science profiles with the right opportunities. This guide, published by DataScienceJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise data science roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

New Data Science Employers to Watch in 2026: UK and International Companies Leading Analytics and AI Innovation

Data science has emerged as one of the most transformative forces across industries, turning raw information into actionable insights, predictive models, and AI-powered solutions. In 2026, the UK is witnessing a surge in organisations where data science is not just a support function but the core of their products and services. For professionals exploring opportunities on www.DataScience-Jobs.co.uk , identifying these employers early can provide a competitive advantage in a market with high demand for advanced analytics and machine learning expertise. This article highlights new and high-growth data science employers to watch in 2026, focusing on UK startups, scale-ups, and global firms expanding their data science operations locally. All of the companies included have recently raised investment, won high-profile contracts, or significantly scaled their analytics teams.

How Many Data Science Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Data Science Job?

If you’re trying to break into data science — or progress your career — it can feel like you are drowning in names: Python, R, TensorFlow, PyTorch, SQL, Spark, AWS, Scikit-learn, Jupyter, Tableau, Power BI…the list just keeps going. With every job advert listing a different combination of tools, many applicants fall into a trap: they try to learn everything. The result? Long tool lists that sound impressive — but little depth to back them up. Here’s the straight-talk version most hiring managers won’t explicitly tell you: 👉 You don’t need to know every data science tool to get hired. 👉 You need to know the right ones — deeply — and know how to use them to solve real problems. Tools matter, but only in service of outcomes. So how many data science tools do you actually need to know to get a job? For most job seekers, the answer is not “27” — it’s more like 8–12, thoughtfully chosen and well understood. This guide explains what employers really value, which tools are core, which are role-specific, and how to focus your toolbox so your CV and interviews shine.