Welcome Guest. | Log In| Register | Membership Benefits

Intelligent Enterprise

Better Insight for Business Decisions

Intelligent Enterprise - Better Insight for Business Decisions
search Intelligent Enterprise
Home
Digital Library
Events
RSS | Newsletters
Webcasts



IBM Acquiring Cognos: Why the Surprise? | Intelligent Enterprise Blog
Natural Insight, By Mark Madsen
Mark Madsen is president of Third Nature, a consulting and research firm focused on business intelligence, data integration and data management. He is a principal author of Clickstream Data Warehousing and speaks about data warehousing and emerging technology.
See More by Mark Madsen

E-MAIL | Follow Us on Twitter FOLLOW US
Share
IBM Acquiring Cognos: Why the Surprise?

Posted by Mark Madsen
Monday, November 12, 2007
2:00 PM

People are acting surprised because IBM bought the last of the big BI platform vendors. I can't figure out why. The marriage of IBM and Cognos has been whispered about for several years. IBM kept saying "we don't want to be in the application business," but they also weren't in the ETL business or the content applications business either.

As a software vendor, IBM is all about enterprise infrastructure. BI as it's talked about today is mostly reporting infrastructure, and as such has become mainstream infrastructure — exactly the sort of thing IBM does.

Being an infrastructure and platform vendor, IBM can't afford to piss off its application partners. Now that the big BI vendors have been acquired by partners/competitors, IBM is free to sell products in that market without worrying too much about damaging relationships.

My view of BI is that it's one of the three application stacks in the enterprise architecture, next to the OLTP stack and the communications and integration stack. It only became obvious when packaged application vendors began adding BI capabilities to their applications and buying up BI vendors. IBM now has complete coverage across the entire enterprise infrastructure stack for OLTP, BI and integration/communications.

What will be interesting is how this changes the market. BI tools have been in need of a split, separating the user interface components from the data access components, in much the same way that client-server computing in the '80s-'90s separated the UI and client from the server.

By making the data access and query elements separate components from the UI, we can take advantage of the BI and data warehousing infrastructure from more than just reporting tools. It means the data warehouse and BI can enter the SOA world and match up with what's happening on the Web today. Let's hope IBM decides to lead the way in this area.



E-MAIL | Follow Us on Twitter FOLLOW US
Share




This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.


 




    Subscribe to RSS feed of all blogs