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The Intelligent Enterprise Blog: Cindi Howson's BI Scorecard
Cindi Howson Cindi Howson's BI Scorecard

Cindi Howson is the founder of BIScorecard, a Web site for in-depth BI product reviews. She has been using, implementing and evaluating business intelligence tools for more than 15 years. She is the author of Successful Business Intelligence: Secrets to Making BI a Killer App and Business Objects XI R2: The Complete Reference. She teaches for The Datawarehousing Institute (TDWI) and is a frequent speaker at industry events. Write her at cindihowson@biscorecard.com.


SAP Gets Microsoft Nod on Performance Management

I hadn't even had my first cup of coffee yesterday when this press release caught my attention.

SAP announced that Microsoft supports SAP BusinessObjects Planning and Consolidation (BPC, formerly known as OutlookSoft) as a preferred solution and are identifying joint marketing initiatives.

>>Continue reading "SAP Gets Microsoft Nod on Performance Management"


Posted Thursday, November 19, 2009
2:49 PM
>>Comments


Open Source vs Commercial BI

It's been a long, slow process, but I am pleased to say BI Scorecard has begun adding open source BI to its product evaluations! I actually blogged on this topic a few weeks ago, when Pentaho announced the acquisition of Lucid Era OLAP viewing technology, but editor Doug Henschen wanted more details and conclusions (demanding, isn't he?!) that I hadn't yet formulated.

I've been collaborating with open source and BI experts Jos van Dongen and Mark Madsen in this process. Jos is the founder of Tholis Consulting in the Netherlands and co-author of the recently published book Pentaho Solutions. Mark is the founder of Third Nature and a fellow instructor at TDWI.

>>Continue reading "Open Source vs Commercial BI"


Posted Thursday, November 12, 2009
10:05 AM
>>Comments


Visualization and SaaS Shine at TDWI

I'm just back from sunny, warm Florida, venue for TDWI's conference. The brightest spot from this conference is that it was one of the best attended of the year. I hope it's a sign of recovery, at least in the BI world!

I had the honor of delivering the keynote on Monday, with new findings on secrets to successful BI (details to follow next week), but I first wanted share some insights from my "Cool BI" course.

>>Continue reading "Visualization and SaaS Shine at TDWI "


Posted Thursday, November 5, 2009
10:34 AM
>>Comments


IBM Cognos Express and the New BI Battle Ground

While much of the BI software competition has been at the enterprise level in large companies and public agencies, market share in the small to midsized business (SMB) is shaping up to be the next battle ground. Microsoft has largely dominated this space, with its "BI for free" included in SQL Server and Share Point, SAP BusinessObjects has also pursued this segment with its Edge Series. But how much this market has grown is most apparent through QlikTech QlikView in which 50-user deployments are the norm, and revenue growth has been 40% to 80% for the last few years (BI growth overall has been 8% to 10%, according to most estimates).

One of the tricky things with BI for SMBs is that the IT department may be a one-person show, with limited resources and rarely the expertise to build a data warehouse or to deploy complicated BI tools. Fast deployment and simple administration are key. I'll find out in a few weeks just how well the just-announced IBM Cognos Express addresses these aspects when the product will be available for trial download.

>>Continue reading "IBM Cognos Express and the New BI Battle Ground"


Posted Wednesday, September 16, 2009
2:22 PM
>>Comments


Can BI Help Battle Swine Flu?

If you have school-bound children as I do, no doubt you are reading the headlines of swine flu wondering how you, your children, your company will battle this year's flu season now that school is back in session. It's the highly contagious, seemingly unavoidable aspect of swine flu that worries me. When you own your own company, there is no such thing as "paid sick days."

Business intelligence is helping monitor swine flu in a number of ways. Emergency Medical Associates (EMA) operates hospital emergency rooms in northern New Jersey and New York metro area. They have a relatively unique ability to collect patient data across multiple hospitals, on a daily basis, and then analyze it with SAP BusinessObjects (see graph)...

>>Continue reading "Can BI Help Battle Swine Flu?"


Posted Wednesday, September 9, 2009
8:28 AM
>>Comments


Is Oracle BIEE 'Plus' Really a Benefit?

There is little question that since Oracle's acquisitions of Hyperion and Siebel, the vendor has evolved into a major BI player. Its core BI revenues grew 17% last year, and it has gone from a second-tier player three years ago to now a solid number three (according to IDC figures). Its analytic applications -- which offer prebuilt dashboards, reports, and data models for E-business Suite, PeopleSoft, Siebel and, recently introduced, J.D. Edwards -- are unmatched by its three closest competitors. While everything would seem to look rosy in Oracle's BI world, two blemishes are its complex BI tool portfolio and a delay in OBIEE 11g.

Oracle has a "protect, extend, evolve," policy, meaning if you were on Hyperion System 9 prior to the Oracle acquisition, you can safely continue to expand your deployment on that platform. The vendor has announced lifetime support for all the Hyperion and Oracle Standard Edition BI products. In fact, the "plus" in "OBIEE Plus" is that it includes Hyperion Interactive Reporting (formerly known as Brio) and Production Reporting (formerly known as SQR); Essbase meanwhile is a separate license (see this evaluation for clarification on modules and strengths and weaknesses).

>>Continue reading "Is Oracle BIEE 'Plus' Really a Benefit?"


Posted Tuesday, August 11, 2009
3:21 PM
>>Comments


On SPSS and IBM's 'Time to Value' Promise

Yesterday IBM announced its intent to acquire the advanced analytics vendor SPSS for $1.2 billion.

The acquisition fills what had been a void in IBM's business intelligence capabilities and is a further expansion of its Information on Demand portfolio, with $10 billion in acquisitions over the past several years.

Predictive analytics has been a hot topic for years but one in which there seems to be little consensus on how to bring it from the back room to the front lines. It's clear that building good predictive models requires a high degree of expertise and is not something that will become main stream any time soon. However, incorporating the results of those models into everyday decisions that even the most novice of information users can consume and act upon has become the holy grail. So what does that mean -- store everything in the database? Execute at run time and surface in a report?

>>Continue reading "On SPSS and IBM's 'Time to Value' Promise"


Posted Wednesday, July 29, 2009
12:14 PM
>>Comments


Move Over Idol: It's the BI Bake Off

Standard procedure in BI tool selections are bake offs. Customers provide a list of, oh, 100 to 200 requirements, and vendors must prove they can support those requirements. Only a lucky few make it to the final-round, proof-of-concept stage. It's a grueling process for customers and vendors alike, as fraught with tension and subtleties as the American Idol elimination process.

You might argue that BI requirements are much more objective than music performances, where taste in music is very subjective. In some cases this is true. For example, support for Linux is a clear yes/no. However, support for "multiple data sources" is open to interpretation, with all vendors responding "yes," but no two supporting it in precisely the same way. Ensuring a consistent understanding of requirements among all key stake holders is the key to ensuring a successful selection process. So as part of the course I teach at TDWI, we first start with those definitions. Only after this discussion do we launch into the bake off in the afternoon.

>>Continue reading "Move Over Idol: It's the BI Bake Off"


Posted Wednesday, July 22, 2009
9:07 AM
>>Comments


Twisting Terms to Make BI Market Share Claims

I always look forward to IDC's annual BI market shares, waiting to see who comes out on top and who is losing ground. I'm sure everyone noticed that they were, in fact, a month early this year! Call me a bean counter at-heart, but I like the irrefutable, quantifiable comparison they bring that other evaluations (including my own BI Scorecard) lack. Or so one would think.

Most product evaluations involve a degree of subjectivity, with varying definitions and opinions of what capabilities and criteria matter more. The IDC market share figures, on the other hand, are cold-hard facts: what were the revenues, who's leading, who's growing. While such data may have been somewhat trackable on 10Ks when BI vendors were independent, it's now largely impossible as BI is often but a small part of a larger company. Software vendors don't have to report their revenues by market segment, and throughout the year, we only get vague, imprecise references about how the BI business is going. The IDC report lays out the breakdown by vendor.

>>Continue reading "Twisting Terms to Make BI Market Share Claims"


Posted Tuesday, June 30, 2009
11:18 AM
>>Comments


What's Your Secret to Success?

Two years ago, as part of the research for this book, you helped me identify those factors that most make or break your BI deployment. I'd like to know if anything has changed since then.

Take the updated survey here. As before, it's not vendor-sponsored.
Is the economy helping or hurting your BI efforts? Maybe a down economy is forcing you to work smarter, or maybe layoffs and budget cuts are putting a dent in your BI strategy. Two years ago, 42% of you had standardized on a BI platform (see chart below). Have industry consolidation or the economy changed that? And if so, which vendors are you standardizing on?

>>Continue reading "What's Your Secret to Success?"


Posted Tuesday, June 23, 2009
10:24 AM
>>Comments


Who Needs BI When There's Active PDF?

Information Builders kicked off its annual user conference in Nashville, Tenn., this week on an upbeat note to the tunes of a marching band, a furry mascot, and a comedian. Yep, comedian Greg Schwem (very funny!) preceded the official keynote by President and Founder Gerry Cohen. It was a novel start to a BI conference, but with the economy struggling and some attendees having to travel here on their own dime, it was an upbeat start to a smaller-than-usual conference.

The most intriguing part of Cohen's keynote was VP Daniel Ortolani's demo of a new feature of Active Reports called Active PDF. With Active PDF, the entire range of Active Reports capabilities (sort, filter, chart) are now available from within a PDF document. While Information Builders' positions Active Reports for a mobile work force, I see the value as much broader to any information consumer, including customers, suppliers and regulators who receive currently static reports and documents. As a residential electricity consumer, I would love for JCP&L to send me an Active PDF e-bill so I can figure out which months our consumption flags us as a high-consumption electric user. (Heck, I leave our thermostat at 78 in summer, and we even have a portion allocated to wind power! But let's not digress).

>>Continue reading "Who Needs BI When There's Active PDF?"


Posted Wednesday, June 10, 2009
9:41 AM
>>Comments


IBM Cognos Forum: The Secrets and the Sizzle

If you are an IBM Cognos customer, you know this blog is two weeks after the fact. Blame the delayed posting on too much travel, or on my first having to figure out what I could and could not write about.

Non disclosure agreements (NDAs) are one of the trickier aspects of analyst-vendor relations. Vendors will share things under NDA for a number of reasons. Sometimes, it's to gauge the reaction, and if it's consistently negative, then maybe the vendor changes course. Often, though, the NDA is for only a week or so until an announcement has been made publicly. Those NDAs are easy to respect. The harder NDAs to respect are broader, with no deadline, and lots of exceptions. Like "anything said during this four-hour period is NDA, unless it was about product A or Z, release N or N.1." And in this age of blogging and tweeting, timely and clear NDA guidelines are a must.

>>Continue reading "IBM Cognos Forum: The Secrets and the Sizzle"


Posted Wednesday, May 27, 2009
6:50 AM
>>Comments


Explorer Splash Shows BI Matters to SAP

If you've been following Business Objects' innovations, you know Polestar is a combination search, exploration, and visualization tool. I have described it as an iTunes- and Google-like approach to BI. It certainly makes my "cool" list and is a product the company has demoed as part of the Cool BI course I teach at TDWI.

Yesterday at SAP's Sapphire conference in Orlando, Fla., the vendor announced "Explorer," a combination of Polestar and the Business Warehouse Accelerator (BWA). BWA is SAP's in-memory database and appliance (see my in-memory BI feature for more info). And don't let the "Explorer" rebranding confuse you (as it did me!); we aren't talking about the former SAP BEx (a.k.a. Business Explorer).

There are a couple reasons why this is a big deal.

>>Continue reading "Explorer Splash Shows BI Matters to SAP"


Posted Wednesday, May 13, 2009
10:15 AM
>>Comments


Free MicroStrategy 9: Can You Believe It?

When MicroStrategy first floated the idea of a free version of its software several months ago, my gut reaction was not positive. I kept looking for the catch. I also was imagining the inevitable competitive FUD (fear, uncertainty, doubt) that ensues in a cut throat market place. "The product is so weak, so hard, so niche, they have to give it away."

So far, I can't find the catch. Given the product capabilities, migration path, and support, it seems like a deal too good to be true.

>>Continue reading "Free MicroStrategy 9: Can You Believe It?"


Posted Monday, April 20, 2009
12:54 PM
>>Comments


SAP BusinessObjects Changes BI Pricing

It's April 16, the day after tax day in the U.S. Will you be getting a refund or have to pay up? The same question applies to the new SAP BusinessObjects pricing announced yesterday.

I have often said BI pricing is a buyer's nightmare. No two vendors package products the same way, so defining requirements and evaluating alternatives can be a painful process. You would think that procuring the software is relatively easier, but it's often not.

>>Continue reading "SAP BusinessObjects Changes BI Pricing"


Posted Thursday, April 16, 2009
8:42 AM
>>Comments


BI from the SAP Customer Viewpoint

I'm just back from the SAP Netweaver BI & Portals conference in Florida last week, digesting what's new, what's old, what's coming.

The SAP Insider conference is different from many of the BI conferences in that a media company, rather than the vendor, runs the event. I had last attended an SAP Insider conference shortly after the Business Objects acquisition was announced. Then and now, I noticed a stark contrast between the former Business Objects' conferences and these SAP Insider ones. I would have liked more enthusiasm and certainly less emphasis on legacy products.

>>Continue reading "BI from the SAP Customer Viewpoint"


Posted Tuesday, March 31, 2009
8:26 AM
>>Comments


Self-Service BI: Let Users Get on the (Soccer) Ball

You know that I am a big football fan, Packers in particular, because of my son, but everything I know about soccer (a.k.a. European football), I have learned from my English husband.

What does this have to do with BI? Information Builders just launched this cool new soccer dashboard of the 2009 Champions League. As I wrote about rich reportlets in this Cool BI article, such an interactive report is what most users envision for self-service BI. Users don't want "ad hoc," as in starting at a blank screen with 1,000 possible data elements to choose from. No. Most information consumers want to interact with an existing report or dashboard as a starting point. Self-service BI means users don't have to go to IT for a relatively simple enhancement request to get a sort, filter, chart or new calculation added to the report.

>>Continue reading "Self-Service BI: Let Users Get on the (Soccer) Ball"


Posted Thursday, March 12, 2009
7:36 AM
>>Comments


The Answer to Pervasive BI: the Fed

"Mainstream BI," "pervasive BI" and "BI for the masses" have been the rallying cry for BI vendors for nearly a decade now. Some thought Microsoft could do it with an Excel interface. Others think Google will be part of the answer. I am looking to the Fed.

No, it's not that I am on the bandwagon for the stimulus being the answer to all the world's woes. However, when President Obama first mentioned a website (recovery.gov) as a way of ensuring full disclosure for stimulus spending, I got as excited as anyone can amid this economic crisis.

>>Continue reading "The Answer to Pervasive BI: the Fed"


Posted Friday, February 20, 2009
9:31 AM
>>Comments


Microsoft's Big Change on Performance Management (and BI)

What's the quickest way to grow your market share in an economic down turn? Change your licensing policy! That's exactly what Microsoft has done with its dashboard and scorecard capabilities that were initially part of PerformancePoint Server.

PerformancePoint was released with much fanfare in 2007 as having integrated planning (the big innovation), scorecarding (an enhanced version), and dashboarding (acquired from ProClarity). It turns out many customers only wanted the latter two components, which are more BI related. So now Microsoft is making it easier for customers to get these by including them in the SharePoint Enterprise license. Effective today, SharePoint enterprise customers can download PerformancePoint for free. Conversely, customers who bought PerformancePoint with software assurance can download SharePoint for free. What's more, Microsoft added the following:

>>Continue reading "Microsoft's Big Change on Performance Management (and BI)"


Posted Friday, January 23, 2009
12:20 PM
>>Comments


Does Being 'the Best' in BI Matter?

Just over 1,000 MicroStrategy customers convened here in Las Vegas this week for its annual user conference. Given how travel budgets have been slashed in recent months, I was surprised to see that attendance is only slightly lower than last year's. No doubt high attendance was driven in part by interest in the company's introduction of MicroStrategy 9.

The general session kicked off with a Tina Turner look alike singing "we're simply the best." VP of Products Mark Larow described MicroStrategy 9 as the biggest release since version 7, perhaps the biggest release ever, packing in more than 8,000 enhancements. The most noteworthy are multi-source ROLAP and in-memory.

>>Continue reading "Does Being 'the Best' in BI Matter?"


Posted Friday, January 16, 2009
9:31 AM
>>Comments


Microsoft's Big BI Ads... and About Those Editors' Choice Awards

I know business intelligence is becoming mainstream when my husband asks me about it in the midst of a Giants' football game (note, we are in NJ, but my son has converted me to a Packer's fan, so our real misery was last week. Go figure). It seems Microsoft has launched a new advertising campaign where business intelligence gets top billing. You and your business users will be seeing the ads in print and TV. That's great for business people who need to be the driving force behind BI. It's also great news for IT people who needs the business to care about BI.


I applaud any efforts that raise the awareness of BI, particularly in this tough economy when making better decisions – based on facts – and operating efficiently is a matter of survival for many.

>>Continue reading "Microsoft's Big BI Ads... and About Those Editors' Choice Awards"


Posted Tuesday, January 13, 2009
11:44 AM
>>Comments


Happy Post-Vacation Procrastination!

It's the end of the first post-holiday work week, and if you are like me, you are struggling to get back into the swing of things. I can't quite get my mind around what to tackle first – an article, update the Oracle review, tinker with IBI's InfoAssist, work on two webinars, or write this blog. If only I had some online holiday shopping to distract me!

The first week after the holidays reminds me of what USA Today writer Craig Wilson calls post vacation procrastination. With the winter skies bleak and gray, and NJ calling for yet another snow storm, it seems there's not much to look forward to (or so much to do I'm already overwhelmed).

>>Continue reading "Happy Post-Vacation Procrastination!"


Posted Friday, January 9, 2009
2:20 PM
>>Comments


Try This Fun BI Holiday Shopping App

To celebrate the holiday season, visualization and analytic vendor TIBCO Spotfire has created this fun holiday gift finder (warning, unless you want the continuous jingle tune to draw the ire of co-workers, set your volume to low). I love these viral marketing apps from BI vendors that are not only fun to test drive but also informative!

According to Spotfire, the data in the gift finder is based on data from Amazon and includes prices, popularity rankings, and ratings for a subset of product categories. As I wrote about in the recent Intelligent Enterprise feature article on Cool BI, users can see the value of in-memory analytics in action here as you interact with data visually.

>>Continue reading "Try This Fun BI Holiday Shopping App"


Posted Tuesday, December 9, 2008
9:21 AM
>>Comments


On Thanksgiving, Freedom for Some, Fear for Foreigners

I hope you will excuse a departure from my BI-focused blogs to a more personal one, but on this Thanksgiving eve, I find myself thinking more about freedom and how fragile it is right now. If you are one of the many foreign-born BI product managers, software developers, or BI specialists I have met over the years, then you will want to read this story.

>>Continue reading "On Thanksgiving, Freedom for Some, Fear for Foreigners"


Posted Wednesday, November 26, 2008
3:25 PM
>>Comments


Cool BI from TDWI in New Orleans

TDWI hosted its first conference in New Orleans, post Hurricane Katrina, last week. I admit, I was both worried and curious about the location, still reading regularly about how certain parts of the city have never recovered. And yet, after walking along Bourbon Street, with its diversity, old French buildings, and intricate beads galore, I can see why people are passionate about rebuilding and why TDWI picked it as a conference location.

Back to BI, I taught a new course at the event, the theme of which is highlighted in this week's Intelligent Enterprise In-Depth feature article, "Cool BI: Rating the Innovations." Those who know me know that I am anything but cool. Conservative, yes. Serious, yes. Cool, no. So I was catching some flack about the course title from colleagues, and well, my very cool kids. Trying to get into the spirit of things, I kicked the course off donning a cool '70s dress with Cold Play blasting in the background (guess who picked that music!).

>>Continue reading "Cool BI from TDWI in New Orleans"


Posted Wednesday, November 12, 2008
11:57 AM
>>Comments


Support Tops Priorities for Czech BI Market

While many of my peers headed to Seattle for Microsoft's BI conference this week, I headed in the opposite direction to Prague, Czech Republic, to speak at IDC's annual BI road show.

I had never been here before, and I confess I had a degree of trepidation. While Prague today is a top business and tourist destination, the fall of communism was only 20 years ago. In fact, I was living nearby in Switzerland during that profound time so the memory is not too distant as my Czech friends then wondered if it was really safe to return. Some people I spoke with lament the modernization of the country, whereas others said the changes have been too slow, particularly outside of Prague. But back to BI.

>>Continue reading "Support Tops Priorities for Czech BI Market "


Posted Wednesday, October 8, 2008
9:13 AM
>>Comments


Looking for 'Front-and-Center-ware' at Oracle Open World

This is my first time attending Oracle Open World. I met it with a degree of trepidation when a colleague told me 60,000 people attend. 60,000??! The official count was 43,000, but still, that’s more than twice the size of my home town and 10 to 20 times the size of the typical BI conferences I attend.

So I was a little worried about the BI sessions and customers getting lost beneath the weight of the larger lines of Oracle's businesses (mainly the database and operational apps) — let alone how do that many people move among venues?

>>Continue reading "Looking for 'Front-and-Center-ware' at Oracle Open World"


Posted Friday, September 26, 2008
5:04 PM
>>Comments


TDWI Roundup: BI Bake Off on the Beach?

Back from sunny San Diego, place of TDWI's annual world conference.

I kicked off my week with a birds-of-a-feather networking event. The most popular table? The business-IT partnership, which also happens to be one of the top barriers/enablers to BI success (according to research from my book). The different perspectives — and just how polar opposites they could be — bordered on amusing.

>>Continue reading "TDWI Roundup: BI Bake Off on the Beach?"


Posted Wednesday, August 27, 2008
8:56 AM
>>Comments


Business Objects Says 'Look Beyond BI'

"It's a case where one plus one equals three." Speaking at the first-ever Business Objects Influencer Summit in Boston this week, this is how Sanjay Poonen, SVP and GM of Performance Optimization Applications, explained an increase in BI revenues at the company since it became a unit of SAP.

Normally, following an acquisition, sales decline for the first year or so. Not so with SAP's acquisition of Business Objects, with Poonen claiming sales were 30% higher in the first half of the year compared to 2007. He explained that there is a difference in market dynamics when a market leader acquires another leader versus a niche player. Surprising as well is that company officials estimate half the sales came from new accounts, so the strong performance is not only from Business Objects tapping existing SAP customers.

>>Continue reading "Business Objects Says 'Look Beyond BI'"


Posted Wednesday, August 13, 2008
11:56 AM
>>Comments


Business Objects, SAP Support Lessons Learned

One week later it seems the support situation at Business Objects is settling down, although customers remain miffed and a handful still do not have access to support. There are lessons for customers and vendors alike from this situation, and a question of how the BI vendor will make amends to those most adversely affected.

For most customers, the issue of not accessing support was one primarily of inconvenience and frustration. As of mid last week, according to Business Objects, about 20 percent of customers lacked the ability to logon to the site to open or track existing cases. However, for some, the disruption in support service meant a delay in production implementations.

>>Continue reading "Business Objects, SAP Support Lessons Learned"


Posted Wednesday, July 23, 2008
2:23 PM
>>Comments


The SAP/Business Objects Support Blunder

When SAP acquired Business Objects early this year, it committed to keeping Business Objects as a separate company. As a separate company owned by SAP, it could better execute on its leadership in the BI market and remain open and agnostic to non-SAP customers and systems. Both also wanted to tap into any potential joint customers and synergies. One of those synergies is support.

Naturally, there are economies of scale in sharing support systems to track cases, provide searchable content, and so on. If you are a regular reader of my blog, you know that support is one of my hot buttons and one I consider to be a critical factor for evaluating BI vendors. When things go wrong with software — and they will — it's the quality of support that is the difference between success and frustration and failure.

>>Continue reading "The SAP/Business Objects Support Blunder"


Posted Tuesday, July 15, 2008
12:12 PM
>>Comments


New Tools, New Rules

BIScorecard just posted an evaluation of QlikTech's QlikView, and I confess, this review has befuddled me more than others.

The challenge with new and emerging technologies is in trying to figure out where they fit and whether or not they really are that different. So I find myself thinking about cars and bikes and QlikTech.

When cars first came on the scene, bike enthusiasts were disgusted with those smoke-spewing machines that suddenly stopped working when cars ran out of gas (interesting that bikes are making a comeback in some cities). Sometimes innovations call for new evaluation criteria — with bikes and cars, features like pedals and gears simply don't translate against miles per gallon. So does "in-memory" BI make criteria like SQL-generation less relevant? Why do you need a data warehouse at all if you can load a full Terabyte of data in-memory?

>>Continue reading "New Tools, New Rules"


Posted Monday, June 16, 2008
8:40 AM
>>Comments


Cognos Gets 'Flashier'

Close to 4,000 customers and partners convened in Las Vegas last week for the annual Cognos Forum, making it Cognos' largest conference ever.

While some time was given to synergies with IBM's product line, more air time was devoted to what's new in Cognos 8.3, the performance management products, and previews of what's coming. (Oh, and remember my disbelief in an earlier blog of both Cognos and Business Objects being shrink wrapped with DB2? Well, apparently the disbelief was warranted as the Business Objects OEM never materialized.)

In terms of cool factor, a future interactive viewer capability was the flashiest — literally, as it leverages Adobe Flash to provide this appealing interface. Cognos is not the first BI vendor to leverage Flash, and lack of interactivity has been a competitive weakness.

>>Continue reading "Cognos Gets 'Flashier'"


Posted Monday, May 19, 2008
12:21 PM
>>Comments


BI Goes Green(er)

While many tout BI as a way of boosting profits, BI is increasingly going green as a way to promote sustainability and good corporate citizenship.

Under full disclosure here, I am thrilled that green is gaining ground! I am green, very green. Admittedly, I was not always so passionate about these topics. However, living in Switzerland for eight years forever changed my view of garbage. Indeed the Swiss have "garbage police" who will check your trash to ensure you are recycling and fine you if you're not recycling (I wish they'd visit NJ for a week!). As trash bags are expensive in Switzerland ($10 a bag, if I recall correctly), manufacturers package their consumer products frugally. You can buy milk and fabric softener in something like a ziploc bag, which creates less trash than big plastic cartons. For companies that don't package their goods so wisely, shoppers unwrap things at the supermarket and let the store deal with the unwanted packaging.

>>Continue reading "BI Goes Green(er)"


Posted Tuesday, April 29, 2008
3:43 PM
>>Comments


Is BI a Commodity?

I was recently at a SAS event in which Jim Davis, their Chief Marketing Officer, talked about the commoditization of BI. He described their sales efforts for these applications as low and the price sensitivity as high.

I gasped (silently of course), thinking of the many customers I speak to and work with who spend months evaluating software, sending vendors painfully detailed RFIs, and diligently conducting proof of concepts. Some of these customers already own BI tools or will evaluate tools despite what's being offered to them for free.

>>Continue reading "Is BI a Commodity?"


Posted Thursday, April 10, 2008
7:31 AM
>>Comments


Crystal Shines... For Some

Last November, Business Objects officially released Crystal Reports 2008. It's the product's flashiest release in recent years — and I do mean that literally. One of the most noteworthy enhancements is the ability to embed Flash files within a report. The use of Flash brings reports to life in a way that make them more like mini applications — rich, interactive, and visually appealing. The Flash files can be built in a report developer's tool of choice, but the tightest integration is with the company's dashboard product Xcelsius.

The other enhancement is the ability to view reports over the Web and interactively sort and filter the data cached within the report. The parameters refresh the display without reexecuting a query and thus straining the database, a weakness in some competitive products and in earlier versions of Crystal Reports. There is the inevitable 'BUT' and that is in the product's timing and dependencies.

>>Continue reading "Crystal Shines... For Some"


Posted Tuesday, March 11, 2008
11:02 AM
>>Comments


TDWI in Vegas: Bigger than Ever

This week's TDWI World Conference turned out to be one of the biggest, with more than 1,000 attendees and another 200 executives at the BI summit.

A highlight from the Executive Summit was hearing Michael Masciandaro, BI Director at Rohm and Haas, provide practical tips on where to start with BI. He presented all the lofty goals often discussed at this conference — great data quality, robust architecture — and advocated not to start there. Instead, start with something "embarrassingly small," with a subject area or application that has no competition.

>>Continue reading "TDWI in Vegas: Bigger than Ever"


Posted Friday, February 22, 2008
10:07 AM
>>Comments


Big Blue's BI in a Box

With IBM's acquisition of Cognos completed last week, the merged companies were quick to tout their joint product offerings and future plans at a press/analyst conference yesterday. Given IBM's role as both a data warehouse platform and a services power house, the acquisition clearly impacts existing partnerships in which IBM moves from partner to competitor. The question in this new landscape: who wins, who loses?

>>Continue reading "Big Blue's BI in a Box"


Posted Thursday, February 7, 2008
9:44 AM
>>Comments


Cognos 8.3: The Good, the Bad, the Reality

Last week Cognos announced the release of Cognos 8.3, its flagship business intelligence platform. The latest release includes a number of improvements both for end users and administrators. Although it is a point release, I'd venture to say it's the biggest since Cognos 8 first shipped in November 2005. Here's my take on highlights and gaps…

>>Continue reading "Cognos 8.3: The Good, the Bad, the Reality"


Posted Friday, January 25, 2008
3:24 PM
>>Comments


MicroStrategy Matures – Notes from the Conference

Were the holidays only two weeks ago? They seem a distant memory with so many BI headlines this week alone. SAP and Business Objects announced a number of joint bundles, Cognos launched 8.3, and MicroStrategy kicked off its annual user conference in Miami. The frenetic pace of BI continues in 2008.

>>Continue reading "MicroStrategy Matures – Notes from the Conference"


Posted Friday, January 18, 2008
12:46 PM
>>Comments


Data Quality's Threat to Democracy

Data Quality expert Larry English (catch his keynote address at the next TDWI) has claimed data quality is the second biggest threat to human kind, after global warming. When I first read this statement, I thought it was hyperbole, meant to engage readers. But English makes some compelling arguments. Yesterday's cover story in USA Today is yet one more case to support Larry's dire claim: data quality problems threaten this year's presidential election process.

>>Continue reading "Data Quality's Threat to Democracy"


Posted Thursday, January 3, 2008
11:08 AM
>>Comments


Miracle on Westgate Drive

I have a home office, so when someone pulled up in a Budget rental truck, my first thought was, "Wrong house. We're not moving." Much to my surprise, it was the FedEx delivery person. How brilliant is that?

>>Continue reading "Miracle on Westgate Drive"


Posted Friday, December 21, 2007
11:46 AM
>>Comments


Bigger Things to BI than Vendor Acquisitions

I'm told blogs are supposed to be short and sweet. So my long- winded blog on BI industry consolidation turned into, well, an article — longer, carefully considered, supporting graphs and all. While all this vendor activity fuels the gossip and speculation among analysts, journalists, and vendors, some customers have been decidedly unfazed. Does it help them fix their data quality problems? Nope. Executive level buy-in. No way. Improve the business-IT partnership. Sadly, no, here too.

>>Continue reading "Bigger Things to BI than Vendor Acquisitions "


Posted Thursday, November 29, 2007
9:07 AM
>>Comments


IBM to Buy Cognos: Good News All Around

And then there were none... as in, no major pure-play BI/Performance Management vendors nor BI-agnostic database vendors following IBM's announcement to acquire Cognos.

The acquisition came as little surprise with many industry watchers speculating already last year that IBM would acquire Cognos. In a conference call this morning, neither Cognos nor IBM executives, however, would say the timing of the acquisition had anything to do with the recent SAP-Business Objects deal, or Oracle-Hyperion, or Microsoft's release of Performance Point (is there an elephant in the room?). Instead, Steve Mills, vice president of IBM’s Software Group, said the timing centered on IBM's ability to execute such a sizable acquisition and in response to changing market dynamics with more customers wanting an end-to-end solution. Rob Ashe, CEO of Cognos, said that the acquisition was merely a matter of taking a long-standing partnership to the next level.

>>Continue reading "IBM to Buy Cognos: Good News All Around"


Posted Monday, November 12, 2007
2:30 PM
>>Comments


Analytics: Predictive or Not?

I had to chuckle at Doug Henschen's blog on the confusing terminology on business intelligence and performance management. We in IT seem to use whatever term will generate the most buzz and to heck with whatever confusion ensues. "Analytics" is yet another term in which vendors use it to mean different things and we all interpret it differently.

In a recent conversation with SAS, we seemed to be talking at cross purposes. The SAS executives kept using the term "analytics" when really what they were referring to was predictive analytics. My incorrect interpretation was that they were talking about general data analysis. Given that predictive analytics is one of SAS biggest differentiators, misinterpretation is not good, kind of like a genericized trademark.

>>Continue reading "Analytics: Predictive or Not?"


Posted Wednesday, November 7, 2007
5:11 PM
>>Comments


Notes From SAP, Business Objects User Conferences

Just back from both SAP's Reporting and Analytics conference and Business Objects' Insight conference, both of which were coincidentally in Orlando, Fla., this year.

SAP only recently (as in the last six months, not only last two weeks) was added to my radar. It seemed to me that the Netweaver BI 7.0 release (June 2006) was a marked improvement over the earlier versions. As well, the number of customers telling me they had made the strategic decision to use SAP's BI platform has been on an upswing. So in planning travel schedules, it was unfortunate that both vendors had their conferences the same week but fortuitous they were in the same town.

An interesting difference between the two events: SAP's comments on the pending acquisition? Zero. Comments at the Business Objects event? A lot (see below).

>>Continue reading "Notes From SAP, Business Objects User Conferences"


Posted Monday, October 22, 2007
2:52 PM
>>Comments


Synergies, Overlaps in the SAP-Business Objects Deal

It looks like this time the rumor mill got it right as SAP announced its friendly take over of Business Objects, to the tune of 4.8 billion Euros or $6.8 billion. It makes it the priciest BI/Performance Management deals of the year.

Business Objects CEO John Schwarz did say that the rumors were wrong about the company being shopped around and instead SAP had approached Business Objects. The agreement to be acquired does indicate a change of course for Business Objects, which previously stated its intent to remain a pure-play vendor. With the deal valued at more than five times revenue, the price must have been right. Add to that an SAP-Business Objects combination makes a formidable competitor versus Oracle-Hyperion and Microsoft.

>>Continue reading "Synergies, Overlaps in the SAP-Business Objects Deal"


Posted Monday, October 8, 2007
10:57 AM
>>Comments


Rumors, Shareholders and Customers

I wasn't going to comment on the rumors about Business Objects looking to be acquired, because it seems to be one that resurfaces every few months and yet, everyone seems to keep asking me about it. If the rumor is true, it runs counter to all the positioning the vendor has been doing since Oracle acquired Hyperion. Business Object's positioning has been to emphasize the need for an independent, pure-play vendor that has no allegiance to a particular database or ERP system.

So if they are in the market to be acquired, what does that suggest about their stated strategy: oops, change in direction?

>>Continue reading "Rumors, Shareholders and Customers"


Posted Monday, September 24, 2007
1:50 PM
>>Comments


BI and the Tragedy of the Commons

Is your BI deployment departmental or enterprisewide? That alone is a strong indicator of how successful a deployment you will have. Given that about half of BI deployments are departmental, I can't help but think of the "Tragedy of the Commons," which involves a conflict over resources between individual interests and the common good.

This concept has been used to describe a number of social and economic problems in which an individual's gain comes at the expense of the group. Herdsmen, for example, who have to share pasture for sheep, will continue to add sheep to the property when the products from the sheep (wool or meat) exceed the cost in degrading the common pasture. Global warming problems have been explained by the tragedy of the commons in that individual countries and people don't inherently want to cut emissions or drive smaller cars, not wanting to trade national or personal sacrifices for the greater good of the world.

>>Continue reading "BI and the Tragedy of the Commons"


Posted Wednesday, September 12, 2007
11:38 AM
>>Comments


Deal for Applix Strengthens Cognos' Hand

With all the performance management acquisitions in the spring, Cognos was noticeably quiet. Fueling an already active market, Cognos announced this morning its intent to acquire Applix, makers of TM1 OLAP, planning, and performance management solutions.

While Applix may have ranked at the bottom of IDC’s BI market share report, the vendor has been one of the fastest growing and has a stronger position in the performance management market segment. The acquisition will almost double Cognos’ number of performance management customers.

TM1 in fact used to be the underlying engine for Hyperion Planning, prior to Essbase. TM1 gives Cognos an in-memory OLAP engine with write-back and an open API, things Cognos PowerPlay lacked. In addition to the sweet purchase price — the deal brings Applix share holders ($339 million or about 5 times sales) — the good news for Applix customers is that they will no longer have to turn to another BI vendor for relational and production reporting.

>>Continue reading "Deal for Applix Strengthens Cognos' Hand"


Posted Wednesday, September 5, 2007
11:22 AM
>>Comments


Of BI, Crème Brulee and Chocolate Mousse

Just back from vacation in France and was wowed by something unexpected — BI for waiters! (though the wine impressed me too).

When the waiter showed up to take our order, he wielded a kind of pen-computing/Palm device, not a pad of paper. I had never seen this before — at least not in NYC-area restaurants. At my enthusiasm, the waiter proudly declared "C'est nouveau!"… "it's new!"

Imagine the possibilities: When I order mousse au chocolat and it's sold out, the waiter can proactively recommend an available alternative – crème brulee (not escargot).

>>Continue reading "Of BI, Crème Brulee and Chocolate Mousse"


Posted Tuesday, August 28, 2007
9:25 AM
>>Comments


Make Your BI Vendor Partnership a Priority

As BI becomes a mission-critical business application, it's increasingly important to partner with a BI vendor that understands your business and has a vested interest in ensuring your success. Why is it, then, that some BI vendors still have a hit-and-run sales approach?

As coincidence would have it, on a long plane journey from San Francisco back to New Jersey, I met a very important BI customer wedged in the middle seat next to me. It's a rare experience that a casual acquaintance shares my passion for this space, so I only too happily shared some research from my upcoming book and BIScorecard. As part of the BIScorecard strategic criteria, I include quality of customer account management and technical support.

This particular customer pays his BI vendor more than $400,000 in annual maintenance fees. Sounds like an important customer, right? Yet his last account rep lasted two weeks, and it has been years since anyone has taken much of an interest in their efforts — other than just to sell more software.

>>Continue reading "Make Your BI Vendor Partnership a Priority"


Posted Thursday, August 2, 2007
12:29 PM
>>Comments


MicroStrategy and the BI Breadth vs. Depth Debate

While much of the BI market has been busy expanding its solution breadth – acquiring or developing performance management capabilities – one vendor that has stayed focus exclusively on the BI front-end has been MicroStrategy. Only time will tell if its strategy will pay off, but CEO Michael Saylor has long maintained that there is still a lot of work to be done in the traditional BI space, to solve some of the harder BI problems.

One of those hard problems is impact analysis and regression testing. When someone makes a change any where in the BI lifecycle, say a physical field in the data warehouse, identifying affected reports is often guesswork. A handful of BI vendors do "okay" in telling you which reports are impacted (see BIScorecard, architecture criteria for detailed scores); for most others, the reports will out and out break.

>>Continue reading "MicroStrategy and the BI Breadth vs. Depth Debate"


Posted Wednesday, July 18, 2007
9:19 AM
>>Comments


BI in Rome

Last week, I had the opportunity to participate in Technology Transfer's annual data warehouse and BI summit in Rome, Italy.

It's been about 11 years since I've been to Italy and this was my first work-related trip there. So I was a little nervous – does the Italian market care about the same issues as the U.S. market? Do they face the same challenges?

>>Continue reading "BI in Rome"


Posted Wednesday, June 20, 2007
1:03 PM
>>Comments


The Rise, Fall and Return of Operational BI and Analytic Applications

I find the recent press on operational BI an interesting resurfacing of events.

A few years ago, operational BI was a hot topic. With EII technologies that allowed BI tools to tap directly into source systems, some wondered if it was the demise of data warehousing as we knew it. (It wasn't.) Analytic applications share a similar story with operational BI, as many vendors initially jumped on this band wagon and later retrenched, either exiting this market entirely or rethinking their strategy.

>>Continue reading "The Rise, Fall and Return of Operational BI and Analytic Applications"


Posted Tuesday, June 5, 2007
3:17 PM
>>Comments


On BI Bake Offs and Vaporware

I really shouldn't call it a "BI Bake Off," because the demos are tightly scripted to maximize educational value and enable everyone to win. At TDWI in Boston last week, attendees of the course Evaluating BI Toolsets got to see Business Objects, MicroStrategy, and Oracle demo head-to-head, using the same data set and on topics attendees consider the most important buying criteria. (If you want to see Cognos, Microsoft, and SAS head-to-head, come to TDWI in San Diego in August).

>>Continue reading "On BI Bake Offs and Vaporware"


Posted Wednesday, May 23, 2007
10:06 AM
>>Comments


Microsoft and Business Intelligence for Everyone

If a user conference is a barometer for market leadership, then Microsoft's first ever BI conference clearly shows they are in the top tier. More than 2,500 attendees have gathered here in Seattle to learn and share tips on Microsoft BI as a data warehouse platform, provider of BI front-end tools, and soon, performance management (due late summer).

Microsoft's rallying cry is "BI for Everyone." While "BI for the masses" borders on cliché (and I'm glad they wordsmithed their mantra), Microsoft most differs from other BI vendors on two points. First, is removing price as a barrier for wider adoption. As a case in point, the price of once independent ProClarity has been slashed from $800 to $200 per user under Microsoft's ownership. Even with price cuts, Microsoft says revenues for this product line has increased.

>>Continue reading "Microsoft and Business Intelligence for Everyone"


Posted Wednesday, May 9, 2007
2:49 PM
>>Comments


Should BI & Performance Management Be a Single Platform - Part II

Whenever I disagree with someone smart, I automatically assume I must be wrong and seek to understand why. So it really bothered me that Doug Henschen was so certain that customers are driving demand for BI/PM convergence in this blog. It also doesn't sit too well with me that the vendors are clearly pursuing this strategy, while I'm saying I'm only seeing a handful of customers buying into it.

Let me clarify though:

A BI solution that delivers measurable business benefit and thus improves business performance is the goal for most BI deployments. I strongly disagree with Applix's CEO Plummer's comment "BI has always offered a historical perspective, but the insight hasn't been actionable." As one customer recently explained to me, "we saw an immediate lift in sales the week we deployed our BI solution." Why? Because the BI team went to great lengths to understand the business drivers and to deliver information that allowed all front-line workers to affect those drivers. Note: Applix is not the only vendor to try to pidgeon-hole BI as backward-looking and inactionable.

>>Continue reading "Should BI & Performance Management Be a Single Platform - Part II"


Posted Wednesday, May 2, 2007
3:22 PM
>>Comments


Face Off: Business Objects vs. Oracle (and Microsoft)

When Business Objects first acquired SRC software in Q3 2005, some industry and financial experts wondered, "why SRC, a little known budgeting, planning, and financial consolidation vendor … why not a stronger performance management player such as Cartesis or OutlookSoft?"

Fast forward 18 months and Business Objects did exactly that, announcing late Sunday night its intent to acquire Cartesis.

>>Continue reading "Face Off: Business Objects vs. Oracle (and Microsoft)"


Posted Monday, April 23, 2007
11:41 AM
>>Comments


Do Women Belong in The Kitchen or in BI?

I want to highlight a piece of recent news from CIO Insight: women are leaving IT. There are no studies as to why this is happening, only the fact that it is. Fortunately, for women in BI, it looks like our role in this segment of IT remains steady at 28 percent, although our pay is falling, according to just released research from TDWI.

Compared to other IT sectors, BI leadership seems to be wonderfully represented by females, particularly in industry thought leadership.

>>Continue reading "Do Women Belong in The Kitchen or in BI?"


Posted Monday, April 23, 2007
8:56 AM
>>Comments


The Sweet Sound of Success!

As Dave Stodder writes in a recent feature story, BI penetration remains relatively low in most organization, at about 20 percent of employees. Yet what we did find in a survey last summer, is that for companies that consider their BI deployment "successful," BI usage is much higher.

>>Continue reading "The Sweet Sound of Success!"


Posted Monday, April 9, 2007
8:19 AM
>>Comments


Lawsuit Spotlights Loyalty As Well As Ethics

The BI industry has long been rife with companies suing one another. Most recently, Hyperion and HyperRoll squabbled about patent infringements, finally agreeing to become partners. Business Objects and MicroStrategy kept counter suing each other over a period of five years, with both parties ultimately declaring victory and neither having to pay one another. Last week, Oracle joined the cacophony by filing claim against SAP.

>>Continue reading "Lawsuit Spotlights Loyalty As Well As Ethics"


Posted Tuesday, March 27, 2007
2:26 PM
>>Comments


How BI Can Solve Airline and Passenger Woes

Stranded travelers and lost luggage are daily news items of late. Outraged passengers, grounded on the tarmac for hours, are demanding a Passenger Bill of Rights. Airlines, BI can rescue you!

As James May, head of ATA wrote in a USA Today editorial, the best punishment for airlines with bad service records is natural economic forces -- let customers fly better-managed airlines. In reality, customers don't know which airlines are better managed as we have so little information about airline performance and even less about things like lost baggage rates.

>>Continue reading "How BI Can Solve Airline and Passenger Woes"


Posted Monday, March 19, 2007
10:39 AM
>>Comments


Oracle to Buy Hyperion: A Look Behind the Scenes

So much for rumors! This morning, Oracle announced its intent to acquire Hyperion Solutions … not Business Objects as the rumor mill previously suggested. With performance management and BI slowly converging and arch competitor Microsoft about to release a complete product set, it's a smart but aggressive move on Oracle's part. For Hyperion, I only hope that the best people and products don't get lost in the shuffle.

>>Continue reading "Oracle to Buy Hyperion: A Look Behind the Scenes"


Posted Thursday, March 1, 2007
11:05 AM
>>Comments


Predictive Analytics: The Next Killer App?

At this week's TDWI Executive Summit, CIOs and IT leaders cast their votes on what BI innovation would have the biggest business impact in the next few years. The most highly ranked item: predictive analytics.

Given the perceived value of predictive analytics, why does it seem to have had such lack luster success to date? Like most things, I suspect the answer is part cultural and part technological. Creating predictive models takes some sophisticated skill sets and software. Most companies have specialists doing such analyses, yet often, the results of the analyses stay largely in the hands of the specialists. Recent innovations are changing this.

>>Continue reading "Predictive Analytics: The Next Killer App?"


Posted Thursday, February 22, 2007
1:35 PM
>>Comments


The 'Googlization' of BI... 7 Feet of Snow Coming!

One thing is clear: When you have four Intelligent Enterprise bloggers blogging on a similar topic, it's important! My fear though, in looking at Web site logs, is that we're not yet grabbing your attention on just how important this topic is.

"Search and BI" sounds boring. "Structured and unstructured content" is too conceptual to get you excited. Will the "Googlization of BI" grab your attention? "Seven feet of snow coming your way!"? (Okay, NJ is getting only a puny 12 inches, just enough to make me dread flying tomorrow.)

>>Continue reading "The 'Googlization' of BI... 7 Feet of Snow Coming!"


Posted Monday, February 12, 2007
11:37 AM
>>Comments


Don't Let the 'Crystal Decisions' Name Fool You

At first blush, Business Objects' midmarket announcement seemed to me more of the same strategy they've been talking about for the last few years: to pursue both the enterprise BI segment as well as the SMB segment. The difference is in the details, though, and this latest announcement shows a much higher degree of activity and focus.

In the enterprise BI space, it's a bit of a cat fight for market share, with Business Objects, Cognos, Hyperion and MicroStrategy continuing to claw at each other. In the SMB space, the market is much more fragmented. While Microsoft certainly wins for brand recognition, there are dozens of other niche players including QlikTech, Celequest (acquired by Cognos last month), and Dimensional Insight to name a few. Business Objects officials concede the biggest competitor in the SMB space is limited BI awareness. Rarely will you see BI discussed in SMB-focused magazines (Inc, Entrepreneur, Fortune Small Business). Many SMBs still think that reports – any reports – out of accounting systems are just fine.

>>Continue reading "Don't Let the 'Crystal Decisions' Name Fool You"


Posted Monday, February 5, 2007
5:31 PM
>>Comments


Call Me a Laggard, But I'll Miss Print

It might seem odd that a technology analyst and evaluator like myself does not whole-heartedly embrace all the latest technical innovations. In some respects, I'm a laggard. As an example, let's take the recent decision by CMP to cease the print version of Intelligent Enterprise. In many respects, I like the online experience of Intelligent Enterprise: I can readily search for reviews, articles and the like, as opposed to saving every last issue for the past five years (okay, I do that too -- packrat and laggard is a bad combination). I can also readily see how often someone reads one of my articles and clicks through to BIScorecard, something not possible with the print magazine and a capability every writer and advertiser wants.

>>Continue reading "Call Me a Laggard, But I'll Miss Print"


Posted Friday, February 2, 2007
9:20 AM
>>Comments


Cognos Acquires Celequest: A Smart Move!

Dashboards are the face of BI for a very important user constituency: managers and executives. Given the importance of this aspect of a total BI solution, it came as little surprise to me that Cognos nabbed Celequest, a small player with a powerful dashboard solution.

Until now, Cognos' own dashboard solution has been limited to that of a single Report Studio document. While Cognos 8 brought some improved visualizations embedded in Report Studio documents, it misses the mark for one essential dashboard requirement: multiple data sources. While it's possible to address multiple data sources at a higher level in Cognos 8 Framework Manager (the business meta data layer), this approach makes the current dashboard solution less nimble and forces the Framework Manager model to be more complex.

>>Continue reading "Cognos Acquires Celequest: A Smart Move!"


Posted Friday, January 19, 2007
1:28 PM
>>Comments


Insight at the Speed of Thought… Sometimes

The Internet has raised the bar for BI expectations. We want to click a report and get an answer now. Complex query? Millions of records? Full table scan? Those are details that users really don’t care about. Gone are the days of users being thankful for a weekly print out (conveniently scheduled during non peak processing periods). Gone, too, are the days when users were willing to click on a report only to stare at an hour glass for more than a few seconds, let alone minutes or hours.

It’s clear why user expectations continue to rise: people can view stock prices in near-real time, voting results, sport scores, even traffic. So it would seem perfectly reasonable that corporate data access should be equally instantaneous.

>>Continue reading "Insight at the Speed of Thought… Sometimes"


Posted Tuesday, January 9, 2007
12:02 PM
>>Comments


Sweet Suite Integration: BI Vendors Get it Together

Here is another sure-fire way to make BI an everyday office tool: standardize on a BI suite that has all the goodies (OLAP, reporting, query, dashboards) optimized for your different user groups yet reduces the cost of ownership.

A fair few nay sayers out there continue to grumble that the latest versions of BI suites are a not at all integrated. Not true! You can read about the finer points of integration in the BIScorecard BI Suite Integration report along with analyses of each vendor, but the bottom line is that the latest releases are miles ahead of what were previously disparate products. Here are just a few examples:

>>Continue reading "Sweet Suite Integration: BI Vendors Get it Together"


Posted Thursday, December 21, 2006
7:06 AM
>>Comments


To Get BI to 110 Percent, Add Business Relevance

In my last blog, I asked you to think about how you can take your BI deployment to 110 percent of your employees. Part of what will get you there is technology dependent. The other part is business relevance.

In building a BI application or individual report, business and IT engage in a clumsy dance of users defining their requirements and IT interpreting those requirements. If the business doesn’t ask for something, they don’t get it. So users will over ask, and IT will do a data dump, overwhelming the business users. It's not a pretty waltz and is something more akin to Ben Stiller’s salsa attempt in Along Came Polly.

>>Continue reading "To Get BI to 110 Percent, Add Business Relevance"


Posted Monday, December 4, 2006
7:45 PM
>>Comments


BI on Steroids Reaches the Extended Enterprise

Yes, I too have finally caved to the blogging phenomenon, and although blogging and discipline are somewhat incongruous, I fear I will give blog readers yet another diversion to real work if I don’t stick to some sort of schedule. So look for blogs from me each week or as industry events unfold.

What’s on my mind this week? I want you to start thinking about BI on steroids –- the innovations that will take BI to the point of becoming a must-have office tool for 110 percent of employees. These are not just the technical innovations, but also innovations in how you think about BI and view information processes.

>>Continue reading "BI on Steroids Reaches the Extended Enterprise"


Posted Monday, November 20, 2006
9:58 AM
>>Comments


 




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