Business Intelligence Trends
If
you are planning a Business Intelligence solution, it is well worth
being aware of the current trends so that you can gauge an idea of
where the market is heading. Once of the biggest trends in
recent years is one of vendor consolidation. In early 2008, two of the
largest pure play Business Intelligence vendors were acquired by larger
software companies. Business Objects was bought out by SAP in a deal
worth $6.8bn and Cognos was bought out by IBM in a deal valued at $5bn.
Smaller niche players are not immune either - Spotfire was
acquired by Tibco, ProClarity was acquired by Microsoft, and Panorama,
although still independent (good for them!) is working closely with
Google on some exciting online analytical tools. This rapid
pace of consolidation is due to the ever growing Business Intelligence
market. Business Intelligence is on the radar of many CEOs and CFOs.
With the vast volumes of data being collected by these organisations,
they identify a clear need to process this information into meaningful
information. Proper analysis of your underlying data can literally save
an organisation millions of dollars. The large software houses are
aware of this, and ever eager to get a peice of the action, have been
snapping up the Business Intelligence players. While this may
dissapoint many, solace can be found in the quality and innovative
nature of some of the products being developed by the smaller Business
Intelligence vendors. Consider data visualization. Although not
the panacea for the BI industry, it provides a visual way to process
many thousands if not millions of data points. Key developments in
these areas include heat maps, sparklines and more recently animation
or animated graphs. Another trend is that regulatory
requirements is driving the need for accurate and reliable reporting.
No more pulling data from multiple Excel data sources and Access
databases. Organisations today need to be absolutely sure where their
data is coming from (data lineage), what has been done to it, and where
it is ending up. The also need to ensure their data is clean and
accurate (read data cleansing tools), and delivered promptly to the
people that need it - be it business users or regulatory bodies. This
requires a clear Business Intelligence process system. Many
Business Intelligence vendors are beginning to move their products away
from a full client based reporting product to a web enabled product,
reducing the client footprint effectively to zero. This can be seen
with the Business Objects Web Intelligence product. Panorama and Google
are taking this a step further by working on a cloud based approach -
in these cases you don't even need the hardware. You simpoly access the
software via a subscription based internet service. And
finally, there is much more of a focus on data quality. This area is
improving, but more needs to be done. It is shocking at the quality of
data being held in corporate databases today. Whether this relates to
incorrect addresses, multiple customers due to incorrect spellings,
missing data, etc. these all add up to extra cost, time and effort on
the part of end users. Often considered something that 'users can live
with', data quality is now being seen as an important element of a
Business Intelligence solution.
Business Intelligence Trends
Business Intelligence Strategy

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