Business Intelligence Implementation
A Business Intelligence implementation needs to cover, at a high level, eight or nine key areas. The first is capturing business requirements.
Critical to the success of any Business Intelligence implementation,
several meetings should be undertaken with the user community to
determine the requirements of the business. This should involve all
levels of staff - from junior analysts to board members. All will have
differing requirements. These requirements are captured either in user
workshops or one to one sessions. Next is analysing user requirements
to determine a suitable Business Intelligence solution. Once all the
user requirements are in, these need to be sorted and analysed to
determine what solutions can be implemented to address their needs. You
will often find that 80% of user requirements can be satisfied quite
easily within the existing budget and timescales. The remaining 20%
will normally involve considerable development effort or money, often
both. Once you know what your users want view demonstrations of Business Intelligence products.
There are many Business Intelligence products onthe market today. Based
on what you need to deliver, you need to make time to determine what
software can deliver the answer. This may require software from several
software houses. Don't fall into the trap of buying all your software
from one software house. As much as they want you to do it, select the
best products that will suit your needs, not theirs. After reviewing
the various solutions available, make an informed choice as to what you
are going to select. At this stage you need to make sure you can build the right team.
Based on what you have to deliver and the timescales, scale you team
accordingly. You will need a team of developers, testers and project
managers to help you with this task. You may also want to consider
external consultants to help you with the implementation task. Following on is the development of a prototype or proof of concept.
This is a worthwhile step. It allows you to work with the product and
deliver a quick win to users. Develop something useful that the users
can give feedback on and use their comments going forward with the
major rollout. This leads to development of a full scale Business Intelligence solution.
All hands on deck here as you begin to develop the Business
Intelligence solution. Accuracy is the key here - accuracy in
delivering requirements, accuracy in data quality, accuracy in
delivering to expected timescales. Test. Extensively.
Nothing is worse that raising expectations, spending lots of money,
investing lots of time, to then shoot yourself in the foot by poor or
rushed testing. If possible test against similar data, or data from
other sources. Test all funtionality, drill downs, filters, prompts,
scheduling, user access, server access, etc. It all matters. And finally training.
This can easily be done in batches, perhaps a few hours per session.
Grant users access to the solution once they have completed training. Feedback.
Request feedback from users. This will be a continual process. More
often than not they will be requesting more functionality, they will
want to do more and more. There may also be issues with performance, or
lack of functionality. Build this into a plan so that you can iron out
any last minute issues. A good Business Intelligence
implementation should cover all of these areas as a minimum. They are
the cornerstones of a successfull BI project.
Business Intelligence Implementation
Business Intelligence Strategy

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