Business Intelligence Issues
A
number of Business Intelligence issues will invariably crop up during
any Business Intelligence implementation. It is always best to be aware
of what these issues may be, so that suitable measures can be taken to
ensure they don't cause problems later down the line. 1. Not understanding what the users want or why they want it Business
Intelligence needs to serve the purpose of deliverying information to
users in the format they want, when they want it. It needs to add value
to them, and help them make better decisions going forward. Your user
community must be involved and on board. Select a group of user
'champions' or evangelists who can sell the message deep into your
organisation. Arrange workshops to determine user requirements, and
when you have all that information to hand, decide what is the best
application to deliver that solution.
2. Trying to shoehorn all your users into one way of doing things Just
about every Business Intelligence vendor will make a case for using
their full product stack - from ETL to reporting to dashboards and
analytics. This needn't be the case. Different vendors provide
different tools, all with different levels of usability. Some
applications integrate very well with everyones favorite analytical
tool - Excel. Others require you to work entirely with their product.
If your users are extracting meaningful information from existing
tools, think about supplementing those tools - don't take them away.
3. Wanting to do it all in one go. Wanting to be all things to everyone Start
with a small proptotype, perhaps a small business area, or a small
suite of reports. What do the users think? Remember, everyone will have
an opinion. So don't make add complexity to a product to satisfy the
needs of a small minority.
4. Lack of clear rollout and training plan Be
realistic about your rollout plan. Business Intelligence takes time to
implement properly. Rather than go for a big bang approach, consider a
phased roll out so that you can gauge user response. And don't forget
training. All users need to be trained in the new product, even if it
is for a few hours. If they feel confident with the product, and you
can show what it can do for them, they will use it.
5. Ambiguity on business terms Different
departments attach different meanings to business terms. Develop a list
of key business terms and make sure everyone agrees with it's
definition.
6. No high level (board level) sponsorship of a roject One
of the major Business Intelligence issues and critical to the success
of a Business Intelligence project. A high level board member needs to
champion the BI technology to ensure it is implemented correctly and
efficiently throughout the organisation. If they are not on board, an
important rollout of BI is unlikely to succeed.
7. Unrealistic and unreasonable time scales Business
Intelligence takes time. User workshops, feedback sessions, iterative
developments, testing and training all take time. Business Intelligence
is best not rushed. It needs to deliver on its promises first time or
users will lose faith in the solution.
To avoid these potential
Business Intelligence issues, review the above list and make sure you
have addressed the points they raise. Ignore at your peril!
Business Intelligence Issues
Business Intelligence Strategy

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