Forgot password?
|
|
|
|
We were unable to sign you in.
Please verify your user name and password and try again. If you do not have a TEC account, register now.
Read Comments

Business Intelligence Benefits Are Real

An extensive 269 pages industry report, OLAP 3 that was published in November 2003 by Nigel Pendse explains that BI benefits are very real. While the report covers many aspects of OLAP and BI, we will focus on business benefits and overcoming the obstacles of achieving those benefits.

According to the report, approximately 19 percent of companies implementing BI claim they have met or exceeded their business goals. Over 60 percent state they have at least largely met their goals. As always, soft benefits were more easily obtainable than hard benefits. A detailed look at the types of benefits reveals the following:

Benefit
% Companies Realizing Benefit
Faster, more accurate reporting 81
Improved decision making 78
Improved customer service 56
Increased revenue 49
Savings in non-IT costs 50
IT savings 40

When the statistics on benefits from a BI investment are compared to those of ERP or SCM investments, we see that BI appears significantly more beneficial. However, it is likely the combination of the ERP or SCM investment and BI generate the benefits because benefits imbedded in the ERP or SCM system cannot be unearthed without the BI tools to dig them out. Moreover, a common opinion on ERP and SCM software is that they generate too much data. BI allows this data to be analyzed to bring forward the most important aspects of the data.

Certain application areas are more widespread than others. The most common applications areas for BI are

  1. General data warehouse reporting
  2. Sales and marketing analysis
  3. Planning and forecasting
  4. Financial consolidation
  5. Statutory reporting
  6. Budgeting
  7. Profitability analysis

Challenges

The implementation of a BI project is not without challenges. Although the selection of the BI product is important, many of the major challenges remain internal. The number one major non-product challenge includes company politics. Experience has shown that single department implementations are less challenging but often result in fragmented, non-integrated approaches that, in the long run, increase interdepartmental issues instead of simplifying them. Experience also tells us that, as with many enterprise projects, those projects crossing department boundaries typically yield a greater value than departmental specific projects.

As with any project, the user is very important and the interest of the user must be considered key to project success. The factor of ease-of-use for users is critical in both product selection and overall success. The OLAP 3 report indicates that the inability to get users to agree on requirements is a common problem with BI implementations and if the requirements are agreed upon, staying on the course without changing the requirements proves difficult.

In the report, the most common product issue was response time. This includes the inability of the product to function effectively with large databases. Another limitation that is both a product and architectural issue is the ability to include various data sources in the overall project.

Product Selection and Implementation Resources

When companies were asked what they considered important in product selection, they answered with the following priorities:

  1. Functionality
  2. End user ease-of-use
  3. Integration to existing applications
  4. Price
  5. Performance
  6. Ease-of-use for application builders

However, when correlated with success factors, a proof-of-concept completed rapidly proves second only to performance as a key criterion for product selection.

Additionally, implementation leadership has a direct impact on project success. Projects led by BI specialist consulting firms are the most successful and have fewer problems. However, the most widely used implementation resource is in-house. Projects led by in-house business users are more successful than those led by in-house IT specialists. Projects led by large, general-purpose consulting firms cost more, are the least successful in business terms and experience the most problems. There is little correlation between project success and consulting dollars.

Strong evidence supports that the more quickly projects are rolled out the more successful they are. Experience also shows that integration into existing applications, prepackaged analytics and ease-of-use are key to compressing the implementation cycle.

The OLAP 3 Report

Nigel Pendse is a noted OLAP expert and industry analyst who has been involved with business intelligence products for over twenty-five years, first as a user, then as a vendor, and since 1994, as an independent industry analyst. He is the lead author of The OLAP Report, (www.olapreport.com) a resource that provides an in-depth analysis of OLAP applications, usage, products, and the market.

The third edition of Pendse's comprehensive OLAP 3 Report is now available from www.survey.com/olap in North America and www.optimamedia.co.uk in Europe. The report is based upon a survey of almost 3,000 people from 1,047 user organizations and 48 countries. The survey asked detailed questions on their purchase and use of OLAP products. The report addresses questions on various aspects of BI projects, including how products were chosen, which applications were used, who implemented them, how long it took, benefits, performance, reliability, and many other technical and business factors.

Recommendations

End user organizations considering a BI investment or who are dissatisfied with the return on existing BI investments are urged to acquire the OLAP 3 Report by contacting one of the two sources listed above.

Companies currently or soon to be evaluating BI products should focus on completing a proof-of-concept-faster as an evaluation tool. End users should favor BI products and services firms that are focused on the application of BI specific to the end user's industry or application areas in order to increase the odds of success.

Vendors who have not added BI to their existing products should consider adding it to their portfolio by using one of the existing BI specialists, if possible. Vendors with mature products will find that the addition of BI will serve their customers' needs and the vendors revenue objectives.

Definitions
Business Intelligence

The use of software tools that enable business users to see and use large amounts of complex data.

The following three types of tools are referred to as Business Intelligence Tools:

  1. Multidimensional Analysis Software, also known as OLAP (see below), is software that gives the user the opportunity to look at the data from a variety of different dimensions.

  2. Query Tools is software that allows the user to ask questions about patterns or details in the data.

  3. Data Mining Tools is software that automatically searches for significant patterns or correlations in the data.
OLAP (On-Line Analytical Processing)

The use of computers to analyze an organization's data.

OLAP is the most widely used term for multidimensional analysis software. The term on-line analytical processing was developed to distinguish data warehousing activities from on-line transaction processing, which is the use of computers to run the on-going operation of a business.

About the Author

Olin Thompson is a principal of Process ERP Partners. He has over twenty-five years experience as an executive in the software industry. Olin has been called "the Father of Process ERP." He is a frequent author and an award-winning speaker on topics of gaining value from ERP, SCP, e-commerce, and the impact of technology on industry.

He can be reached at Olin@ProcessERP.com.


 
comments powered by Disqus


A Portrait of the Enterprise Software User in the Education Industry | Role of In-memory Analytics in Big Data Analysis | Two Vendor Execs Discuss the Current B2B Pricing Market (and its Future) | A Product Note: Attensity and the Voice of the Customer | About Big Data | The Path to Healthy Data Governance | BI Software Implementation Success: The Human Factor | Collecting Meaningful Data from the Web: Once an Impossibility, Now a Reality | Massive Data Requires Massive Measures | In-Memory Analytics: A Multi-Dimensional Study | BPM Product Review: SAP BusinessObjects Planning and Consolidation | A Tour of the Clouds | Product Note: Jaspersoft—Is It Ready for Big Enterprises? | Every Angle for SAP: A Product Note | The Evolution of a Real-time Data Warehouse |
Five Steps to Business Intelligence Project Success | Customer Data Integration: A Primer | Using Predictive Analytics within Business Intelligence: A Primer | Taking Multilingual Support to the Next Level | Operational Business Intelligence and Performance Management: Key Differentiators | ERP: When Transparency Becomes Tunnel Vision | Open Source Business Intelligence: The Quiet Evolution | Distilling Data: The Importance of Data Quality in Business Intelligence | Innovations in Business Intelligence | The Truth about Data Mining | Factors Inhibiting the Widespread Adoption of Business Performance Management | Business Intelligence: Its Ins and Outs | Business Performance Management Basics: An Overview of Business Performance Management and Its Benefits to the Organization | Contemporary Business Intelligence and Its Main Components | Why Manufacturers Should Cash In on the Promise of Business Intelligence | How Can Business Intelligence Benefit Small to Medium Businesses? | How to Evaluate a Sales and Operation Planning System | Data Governance: Controlling Your Organization’s Mission-critical Information | A Retail Sourcing Suite Built on Experience | One Vendor's Quest to Garner a Global Sourcing Ecosystem | Welcome to BI Showdown: Oracle Hyperion System 9 vs. Microsoft ProClarity vs. Exact Business Analytics | Podcast: A Project Manager's Guide to Business Performance Management | Optimizing the Supply Chain and Increasing Customer Satisfaction: An Interview with Robert Abate of RCG Information Technology | Two Stalwart Vendors Discuss Market Trends | Flexible Customer Data Integration Solution Adapts to Your Business Needs | A Simplified Approach to Powerful, Flexible Data Visualization | Alice (or Allen) in MobileLand | An ERP Vendor, with its Powerful Parent Backing, Tackles Software as a Service | Software as a Service's Functional Catch-up | Business Intelligence and Identity Recognition—IBM's Entity Analytics | Case Study: Community College Embarks on Financial Reporting System Implementation | The Challenges of a Business Intelligence Implementation: A Case Study | A One-stop Event for Business Intelligence and Data Warehousing Information | Soured on Expiration: The Value Proposition and Strategy for an Agile Enterprise Systems Vendor | Microsoft Takes A Shot at the Business Intelligence Market | Technology's Role in Strategic Human Resources | Now Just Where Did I Put My Search Engine? | Embracing Complexity: A Speedy Business Performance Management Solution | A Small Enterprise Resource Planning Vendor: The Vision and the Challenges | The Formula for Product Success: Focus on Flexibility and Cooperation | Using Business Intelligence Infrastructure to Ensure Compliancy with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act | Comparing Business Intelligence and Data Integration Best-of-breed Vendors' Extract Transform and Load Solutions | So What: The Big Test of Your Positioning Strategy | Gain More from Your IT Projects | Predictive Analytics; the Future of Business Intelligence | Marquee Vendors Partner for Deepening Inherent CRM and BI Links | Why Are CRM and Analytics Intrinsically Connected? | When Customer Relationships Meets Business Intelligence Marketing Analysis and User Recommendations | SAS and Action-Oriented Business Processes: Alliances, Partnerships, and Acquisitions | SAS: Striving to Sustain Leadership | Competitive Challenges for Vanguard | A Demand-driven Approach to BI | Has the Mid-market Found Vanguard BI Solutions? | Integration and Consolidation of Business Intelligence within Business Performance Management | Business Intelligence Status Report: Recommendations | Access to Critical Business Intelligence: Challenging Data Warehouses? | Business Intelligence Vendors | Business Intelligence Corporate Performance Management Market Landscape | Attaining Real Time, On-demand Information Data: Contemporary Business Intelligence Tools | Contemporary Business Intelligence Tools | Business Intelligence Status Report | Business Intelligence for SMBs: MBS Excel Applications and Competitive Analysis | Vendors Harness Excel (and Office) to Win the Lower-end of Business Intelligence Market | The Perfect Order--Inside-Out or Outside-In? | What's Really Driving Business Intelligence? | Mainstream Enterprise Vendors Begin to Grasp Content Management Part Three: Challenges | Bridging the Reality Gap Between Planning and Execution Part Two: The Manufacturers' Perspective | Bridging the Reality Gap Between Planning and Execution Part One: The Problem | BI Approaches of Enterprise Software Vendors | GXS Acquires HAHT Commerce or More Synchronized Retail B2B Data Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations. | GXS Acquires HAHT Commerce for More Synchronized Retail B2B Data Part Three: Market Impact | GXS Acquires HAHT Commerce for More Synchronized Retail B2B Data Part Two: HAHT Commerce | Exact Software--Working Diligently Towards the "One Exact" Synergy Part Four: Market Impact Continued | Exact Software--Working Diligently Towards the "One Exact" Synergy Part Two: Macola, the ERP and BAM Solutions | PSA -- Still An Evolving Market | FRx Poised to Permeate Many More General Ledgers Part Four: Competitors and User Recommendations | FRx Poised to Permeate Many More General Ledgers Part Three: Market Impact continued | FRx Poised to Permeate Many More General Ledgers Part Two: Market Impact | FRx Poised To Permeate Many More General Ledgers Part One: Executive Summary | Financial Reporting, Planning, and Budgeting As Necessary Pieces of EPM Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Financial Reporting, Planning, and Budgeting As Necessary Pieces of EPM Part One: Executive Summary | Has The BI Market Consolidation Been Crystal-Clearly Actuated? Part Three: Competition and User Recommendations. | Has The BI Market Consolidation Been Crystal-Clearly Actuated? Part Two: Market Impact | Has The BI Market Consolidation Been Crystal-Clearly Actuated? | Geac Gets Its Commonsense Share Of Consolidation, With Revolving Door CEOs No Less Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | BI Market Consolidation Compared to ERP Market Consolidation | Analyse This | The Total EAM Vision Strategic Advantages in Asset Management | Continuous Data Quality Management: The Cornerstone of Zero-Latency Business Analytics | Lawson Enforces Its Stronghold Part1: Recent Announcements | SAP Remains Vital Amid Ailing Market And Internal Adjustments Part 2: Continued Analysis and User Recommendations | SAP Remains Vital Amid Ailing Market And Internal Adjustments Part 1: Recent Announcements | Business Intelligence Success at Biomet, Inc. | SCT Extends Into Business Intelligence | Single Source or Best of Breed - The Debate Continues | Sagent Improves Its Image With SAS Partnership | Seagate Software 'Crystallizes' Its New Name: Crystal Decisions | Information Builders Did It iWay | Business Objects Teams With TopTier For Analytics | Hummingbird Smells Nectar In The Corporate Portal Market | MicroStrategy Manages Your Customer Relationships And Its Own | QueryObject Partners With Cognos | Knosys "in the Kno" With ProClarity 3.0 Analytical Platform | Did Sagent Technology Pull the Old 'Pump and Dump'? | Cognos Unveils CRM Solution | Informix Decides to Start Analyzing Websites | Syncra Systems Helps Kimberly-Clark Clean Up | Microsoft Certified Fresh | OmniSky Selects WorkSpot to Develop Wireless Internet Services | ERP Getting a New Breath of Fresh Air in Europe | Marketing and Intelligence, Together at Last | American Software - A Tacit Avant-Garde? | MicroStrategy 7 Hits the Street | Dead Heat: Corporate Buyers Gain Analysis Tools in Leading e-Procurement Products | Informix Goes Vertical With Software Vendor ADRM | Viador Teams With Business Objects | Applix Still Shows a Presence in the OLAP Market | Information Builders Announces New Release of WebFOCUS | Sagent Technology Teams for Telco e-Business | Sybase Tag-Teams with Informatica | Brio Technology Expands Support for WML and XML | Oracle Warehouse Builder: Better Late than Never? | Symix Maintains Consistent Profitability Despite Y2K Market Conditions | Informatica Conforms to Metadata Standard | Business Objects Outguns Brio Technology in Patent Dispute | Datawarehouse Vendors Moving Towards Application Suites | Microstrategy Moves Up with e-Business | Seagate Technology Refocuses its Software Business | Sagent Technology Reports Strong Growth | Informix to Acquire Ardent Software-Another Vendor's Attempt at End-to-End Data Warehousing | Informatica Heads for E-Business | Acta Technology Helps Add Business Intelligence Capabilities to Major ERP Vendors | SAP and HP on the Web Together | Hummingbird Releases Genio 4.0 With Improved Support for Oracle, Business Objects, Cognos, and NCR | Analysis of SAS Institute and IBM Intelligence Alliance | Business Objects Launches WebIntelligence Extranet | Resistance is Futile: Computer Associates Assimilates yet another Major Software Firm | JBA: Will it remain "@ctive Enterprise"? | Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP) Market - Dismal 1999, the New Millennium to bring Relief (for Some) |


Use this index to search for white papers related to commonly used search terms A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Others 
Recent Searches
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Others
A: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
B: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
D: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
E: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
F: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
G: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
H: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
I: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
J: 1 2 3 4 5
K: 1 2 3 4
L: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
M: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
N: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
O: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
P: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
Q: 1 2
R: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
T: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
U: 1 2 3
V: 1 2 3 4
W: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
X: 1
Y: 1
Z: 1
Others: 1 2 3


©2013 Technology Evaluation Centers Inc. All rights reserved. Search powered by Google