By Kevin Quinn, Vice President of BI Products and Sales Support Services, Information Builders , 10/13/2008
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While software developers consider their business intelligence (BI) applications to be successful if they fulfill the core requirements, a much more meaningful gauge of success is how extensively the information derived from those applications is used. The more consumers of information you have, the greater the value you will obtain from your BI efforts.
Many people in your organization can benefit from current analytical information, whether they work in customer service, shipping, manufacturing, finance, or a host of other departments. How do you achieve this vision? You have to make information relevant to the needs of the moment, and you have to present that information to users in a familiar way.
For example, a call center representative might receive a screen pop advising her about which products to promote to a customer who is on the line at that moment, based on that customer's recent transactions and credit history. An order entry clerk might depend on insight from a BI system to spot orders above a certain value, then recommend a premium supplier based on current promotions and availability.
If these workers have to run historical reports to find this information, it generally slows down the process, and the opportunity is lost. Instead, the information should be automatically selected, tailored, and delivered in a usable form, right then and there. This is the "invisible hand" of BI, working behind the scenes to keep users in touch with information that impacts their sphere of activities.
Of course, BI technology must be presented to users in its simplest form in order to achieve these goals. Most people aren't interested in firing up an ad-hoc query tool or designing a report to find information, no matter how user-friendly these tools may be. Instead, they want to receive information as part of their familiar business processes. That information should be accessible through the programs they use every day such as e-mail, search engines, write boards, web browsers, and spreadsheets, not via BI "tools" that are external to all of them.
Boosting revenue and productivity
Another way to gauge the success of your BI initiatives is the degree to which those initiatives reduce costs or increase revenue. Some BI applications create profit centers, as Moneris Solutions learned after amassing billions of Visa, MasterCard, and debit card transactions in its data warehouse. Moneris created a BI application that allows merchants to analyze this transaction data to better understand consumer-buying patterns -- a service those merchants are willing to pay for.
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