Archive for the ‘ Business Intelligence ’ Category

Video: Mobilise your Workforce

Friday, January 4th, 2013

By Euan Harris

I recently wrote a blog on BuzinessZone about the business benefits of mobile devices such as tablets and smartphones. In it I mention the increased productivity that mobile devices can offer as well as the power of having access to information at all times, wherever you are.

I came across this short but great video from Sage which has some good facts and figures backing this blog up and also outlines some benefits realised by customers through the mobile capabilities of Sage CRM.

Lost Intelligence. Get Discovering.

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

‘Collecting data is easy; accessing and using the data effectively is the challenge!’

With the amount of data collected and stored within a business increasing daily, many businesses are looking for a quick and easy way to access and use the information that flows around their business.

The systems within a business can mass vast back logs of reports and statistics that may have lain dormant over the years. With no clear idea on how the data can be developed and used to their advantage, intelligence is often lost.

This lost intelligence can, however, be clawed back. The historic data stored within these systems and databases is very powerful. The only problem is finding a way of extracting it and using it in an effective manner. Using a reporting tool such as Data Discovery a business user is able to pull specific data out of any software system or database and exploit it to find answers to their questions. Patterns and trends can therefore be identified using associative analysis, helping the user to foresee future risks and opportunities.

Analysing historic data is an important part of understanding the dynamics of a business in terms of past progression and future development. Knowing the nature of your data and how to interpret the results is very beneficial in creating a strong decision making process. It is very valuable information that is both cost effective and relevant to the business.

Visibility of information within the business drives better business performance.

Business users shouldn’t just be end users who passively consume what others produce for them. Users should understand the data they are using and be able to mould and exploit it into giving them the answers they need. Associative analysis gives users access to information that is vital in helping the business to increase revenue, project margins and improve profitability.  

Vital information and intelligence that once would be lost can be manipulated creating insight that will benefit the business in both the short and long term. Collecting and using your data in an effective and productive way can at times seem like a time consuming and endless task. Many have now found that reporting tools can help to make the business more cost and time effective, enabling users to analyse their own data and turn it into meaningful information.

For more information on any of the above topics please email Eureka Solutions or phone the office on 01355 581 960.

Business Discovery – Business Intelligence for the People!

Tuesday, April 24th, 2012

‘Nothing speaks louder to managers then insights based on hard data, gathered in one’s own backyard. ‘Sean Farrington – Vice President of QlikTech (UK and Europe)
by anna Young

Looking at a recent blog by Sean Farrington it reminded me of the problems faced by many businesses in regards to their data and how they use it. More times than not business users get lost in the multitudes of data clogging up their systems. Useful information that could be beneficial to the success of the business gets lost in over complicated and confusing systems. Ordinary users trying to carry out day to day tasks are unable to understand the perplexity of the data and therefore have to base their decisions on gut instinct rather than on facts and figures.

Organisations have to be more intelligence in how they collect and interrupt their data. Having a lot of data doesn’t guarantee success; it’s how the business uses and analyses the data that is important. A business discovery system can be deployed in order to help tackle the problem of data and is becoming more popular in increasing business agility with quick measurable success.

Business intelligence shouldn’t be confusing. It should ‘empower ordinary people to derive extraordinary insights’. It should encourage users to explore their data and discover information.

The data held within our own business systems is highly valuable. It is living data that can help a business user decide what to do tomorrow, today, right now.  Analysing your own business figures can show every angle of your business, the strengths and weaknesses. This gives users the intelligence to make effective changes to the business in order to make it more profitable, productive and secure.

Business Discovery gives every user the right tools to extract and manipulate data, turning it into information. It carries insight to everyone within the organisation, giving every user the ability to make better informed decisions.

Business Discovery is business intelligence for the people. It pulls data from multiple systems and stores it all within one database. This data is associative meaning that every piece of information is linked. It stops the user working for the information, letting the information work for them!

In a world where everyone wants everything right now, Business Discovery is a fast and reliable system that empowers every user to derive their own insights, make better informed decisions and operate leaner, smarter and more profitable.

For more information on any of the above topics please email anna.young@eurekasolutions.o.uk or phone the office on 01355 581 960.

Crucial elements needed to implement a successful Business Intelligence Project

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

Business Intelligence projects depend on information held in business systems and processes.  Effective business systems and processes are fundamentally important to the growth and status quo of any business; therefore it is important that organisations manage these processes effectively to get the most value from them. However, these processes don’t operate in silos. Business processes can have an impact on and can be impacted by the people, technology, information and the working environments that they are part of.  This is why it is imperative that all of these facets are considered when Business Intelligence projects are implemented.

Ignoring or not considering these facets enough could be the reasons why many Business Intelligence Projects fail or do not deliver the ROI value expected.

•    Over Focus on the Technology – Many Business Intelligence projects fall into the trap of being technology led. The technology utilised for gathering and presenting the business information should only be one consideration for the enablement of the project.  

•    Lack of Management Sponsorship – It is crucial that BI Projects are management led. There should also be a nominated project sponsor who has enough power internally to remove any obstacles that may arise. They should understand the company data and systems and ensure the datasets used for analysis are meaningful.

•    Data Clean Up – A business intelligence solution can only be as good as the data held in the business systems it extracts the data from. If you put rubbish in these systems, you will get rubbish out.  So if the data is particularly bad, a data clean up project prior to the business intelligence stage may have to be conducted.

•    Unclear Business Objectives – A clear definition of what is required in terms of business objectives and data outputs is crucial. These should tie in with the key performance measures within the business. Too often lack of upfront planning is the reason why BI Projects do not meet expectations.

•    People Buy In – BI can often expose flaws in the business systems and processes and fixing these flaws requires change and discipline.  Therefore, it is crucial that the people that will be affected by the changes see and buy into the benefit in the BI solution.

Finally it is of paramount importance that ownership and accountability are clearly defined to drive forward the business intelligence solution and implement any changes required to the affected business processes.

 

Eureka Solutions specialise in QlikView Business Discovery software. If you would like any further information on please contact our head office on 01355 581 960 or email enquiries@eurekasolutions.co.uk.

What is Business discovery?

Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

By Anna Young

Most would automatically presume that it is another highly complicated BI system which would require the most data savvy analyst at the wheel, churning out data and reports that couldn’t be understood by the average business executive.

In the last couple of years, the complicated stereotype that was associated with a BI system has started to change, with a new force of Business Discovery emerging into the marketplace. This new wave of BI has shoved every business executive back in the driving seat and on the road to business discovery!

Being able to understand the data within your business is a very important concept, made easy by the ease of use of Data Discovery systems. From discovering what products sell well and why to finding new opportunities and strengthening the overall business performance. This is all information that you wouldn’t necessarily set out or expect to find. Instead it is achieved by the Data being consolidated from multiple locations and being centralised and analysed all within an easy to use dashboard.

Each question answered is the start of another journey waiting to commence!

Everyone, from the very top right down to the bottom is able to explore and discover with this new generation of business intelligence. Users wanted control back and that’s exactly what they got. Users now have the ability to question their data in order to make better more informed decisions, based on information that is up to date and relevant. The system gives insight into your business and shows trends and figures that might have originally been hidden by masses of data and confusing reports. Business intelligence is no longer an over complicated system dominated by IT.

Users are able to collaborate and share their ideas and discoveries throughout the business. One of the main points to business discovery is that it delivers information right into the hands of the user. This information empowers each user with the ability to analyse and use it to help solve any problems and in turn boost the overall performance of the business.

Using a system such as Business Discovery takes the user on a journey that will help them to understand and use their data in the best possible way. There is never a wasted journey, only new ways of discovering, learning and moving forward. With Business Intelligence, seeing will definitely make you believe.

Data Discovery: empower your users, enrich your business!

 

Eureka Solutions specialise on QlikView Business Discovery software. If you would like any further information on please contact our head office on 01355 581 960 or email enquiries@eurekasolutions.co.uk.

Business Intelligence: A Marketers best friend?

Friday, February 17th, 2012

By Anna Young

Marketing is defined as a continual process of generating and sustaining customers. The goal is always about creating opportunities for the business and turning these opportunities into sales. Although the goal of marketing has never altered, the tools and process used to achieve this have – the emergence of user driven Business Intelligence.

Business Intelligence software has evolved into a user friendly product moving control away from IT and into the hands of the entire business. From the top to the bottom, everyone is able to see the benefits of BI. Each department can utilise BI in order to be more efficient in what they do, spot areas for saving costs and identify new business opportunities. This in turn helps to centralise control and get a better understanding of consumer behaviour.

In theory, business intelligence is all about turning data into information. Data from various systems across the organisation can be combined in a central database in order to be easily pulled out by users for integrated visual analysis. From a marketer’s point of view, this fact based information can be analysed and used to strategise and plan campaigns. Market segments can be defined, analysed and compared by customers, products, pricing, location and more. There are no limits to what you can do with the data or in fact the software.

With BI, Marketers can identify market trends and gain insight into consumer behaviour based on past facts and figures. From that information they are able to understand, anticipate and react to future consumer behaviour. This type of information is priceless. The combination of data from all departments ensures that all the information that could be useful is made available at the click of a button on easy to use dashboards.

In the past marketing campaigns were often based on guess work, who were they going to target? Where? And so on. With accurate historical data, real time analysis, and predictive ‘what if’ analysis, campaigns are able to be more effective. Continual analysis of results and feedback from campaigns enables the marketing department to find sales opportunities and locate the best performing areas. It eliminates guess work, ensuring that the most valuable customers and prospects are being targeted at the right time. Being able to use and understand this type of information allows the business to adjust their strategy, pricing and message in order to maximise results.

Business intelligence empowers every user at every level the ability to accelerate in their professional development. This fosters a culture of continual improvement where ‘greater accountability means greater transparency’ and better, faster decisions can be made. Users are able to see where the business has been, where it is now and where they predict themselves to be in the future.

A marketer’s biggest goal is to maintain valuable customers and in turn find new ones. Business intelligence gives each user the tools to achieve this in the most effective and efficient manner, using information that is up to date and relevant to their overall goal.  In my opinion, BI has become a marketer’s best tool in adding and achieving maximum productivity within their desired goals.

Google-Type Reporting with Business Discovery

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

By Alistair Livingstone

Having been in the business of implementing Business/CRM/ERP Systems for many years, reporting has always been the poor relation of implementation. Basically once the system is in, attention turns to reports. It is usually defined as ‘What reports do you want’, i.e. they are created reactively by the client telling us what reports they want.

 

Wouldn’t it be great if the client could ‘create/discover’ their own reports?

Consider Google or indeed any search engine – how successful would they be if the end user had to be prescriptive about where/what sites they wanted to search?

How often have you started looking for something on a Google search and before you know it you’ve shot off at a tangent, reading about the latest video game/holiday park, football transfer? You end up somewhere you never intended to go.

How about a reporting tool that allows you to do the same?

As a business we have recently become involved in QlikView for utilisation in Business Intelligence (BI). Although I was impressed with the product before I took it on I didn’t realise how powerful a tool it really is! The term “Business Discovery” really means something! (See our recent blog, Traditional BI versus Data Discovery)

All ERP/Business systems come with some form of reporting or the ability to utilise Crystal. So what’s different about Business Discovery? Is it really the Business Discovery element that has knocked my socks off?

I have above average skill sets in Excel and often use SQL queries to connect data to Excel and then utilise pivot table/Power Pivot to create, what I thought, were pretty snazzy reporting tools. However I have now realised how difficult they are to use, and indeed limiting. Don’t get me wrong, they are very good and give me the information I want, but I would end up with multitudes of spreadsheets and pages within spreadsheets to get the analysis I need.

Business Discovery is where the reporting tool allows you to meander through data much in the same way as we use Google – you start off somewhere but the model allows you to go places and ask questions that weren’t on the list at the start of the reporting session. Traditionally most reports are static i.e. run the aged debtors every Monday; give me the weekly sales figures etc. A Qlikview model allows you to start with the weekly sales figures, but then go on a journey:

  • What happened to sales in that product area?
  • Let me see the sales by geographical area?
  • Why does area 1 sell more of product 1 than area 2

This is not a traditional drill down of your pivot tables but instead a platform that allows you to meander through the data without rebuilding data cubes or running reports with different parameters. With Business Discvoery it’s the immediacy of the results that matter – the user gets amazingly quick results. Imagine if Google made you wait 10 minutes to open a new browser window!

 

Is it as simple as loading the tool and getting on with it?

No! Qlikview provides a free, fully functioning version of their product to work in standalone environments. It has only been transparent to us after working on models for a few months and completing technical training courses that the biggest drawback is our own, historical, inbuilt mentality on reports. We have been trained to create reports that are prescriptive and reactive – Business Discovery requires a different mind-set.

After two months of working on Qlikview the penny dropped. All we had been doing was recreating what we had in Excel as pivot tables etc. – we weren’t using the real benefits of business discovery. Once we did, we saw the dramatic difference.

 

About the Author

Alistair Livingstone is Managing Director at Eureka Solutions and has over 16 years experience in the business software industry, focusing on ERP, CRM & BI soluions.

Business Discovery: The Next Generation of BI

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

By Anna Young, Marketing Assistant

Following on from our recent post, Traditional BI versus Data Discovery, I came across this video featuring Donald Farmer, Product Advocate for QlikView. In the video, Farmer goes into greater detail on Data Discovery.

2012. Is it a year of change for IT Professionals?

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Anna Young – Marketing Assistant

The next generation of business users might just agree with that.

Having recently read an article that looked into the changing roles of IT professionals in 2012, I began to think that perhaps the old complexity of Business Intelligence has begun to disappear.

Gone are the days when IT had complete control over enterprise technology and budgets, the days when an employee came to IT in order to analysis sales figures or create a report on an important matter. The role of an IT professional has changed from analysing and delivering information, into support and enablement.

Business Intelligence within the workplace is no longer littered with complex words and hard to understand data. Advancements in Business Intelligence software now make it a tool that not only an IT wiz would understand. Instead business users at all ends are able to use and enjoy BI. Laptops, Android phones and tablets have meant that people are not only analysing data in the office, but anywhere at any time.

‘Data Discovery’, as it is now named by Gartner, has given control back to every user giving them an easy means to visualise and use their data in a productive manner. The in memory and associative analysis of data has meant that business users are able to answer questions and solve their business problems at the click of a button.

Business Intelligence has changed its role from an information delivery system into a vital tool in decision making. For more information on this check out our recent blog post, Tradtional Business Intelligence Processess Versus Data Discovery.

Traditional BI versus Data Discovery

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

Traditional BI Process

Historically, Business Intelligence (BI) has been about a report-centric architecture that’s IT-driven and highly controlled. IT departments take operational data, create data models and build reports for end users. Traditional business intelligence delivers predefined reports and queries and pre-configured dashboards.

Let’s look at what’s involved in a traditional business intelligence process. Initially, a data warehouse would be set up to consolidate data from many sources. Data warehouses are designed to run analysis on large volumes of historical data. To get the data into the data warehouse there is then an ETL – Extract, Transform and Load process that it needs to go through. The transform step can include multiple data manipulations such as splitting, translating, merging, sorting & pivoting. The final Load step involves loading the transformed data into the data warehouse.

So in traditional BI, data warehouse and ETL tools support “back end” processes. The next step is usually to use an Online Analytical Processing (OLAP) tool to support the presentation layer or “front end” processes such as querying, analysis and reporting. OLAP tools allow multi-dimensional data analysis & the capability to present this in a visual interface with charts, tables and graphs. Cubes are the core components of OLAP systems; they aggregate facts from the data at multiple levels.

With traditional BI, data sources are normally pre-determined by IT.  End users don’t get to interact with the data in the systems. The analysis and reporting is generally conducted by IT. The analysis and reporting  is hard-wired into the data warehouse and cube structure. Each time data changes are required, the data has to go back through the time consuming ETL process described above, which could involve analysis across networked databases and hard drives. This can be a very slow process.

Business Discovery Process

With Business Discovery Tools like QlikView, this process is very different and much faster. QlikView takes all of your data from virtually any source and consolidates it into a single data pool. Next, QlikView loads the entire data pool into memory. Users don’t have to pre-process data and organise it into cubes and there are no hard disks involved like in traditional BI. Accessing data in memory is much faster than accessing data from disk.

With QlikView users get to search and analyse all of their data in one place. As the data is in memory, there is no need to wait on data refreshing with each new data selection. Users can instantly select data they are interested in, make associations and see relationships between data residing in different applications. They can perform ad hoc queries on the data and ask ‘what if’ type questions all within the one application. Business discovery tools like QlikView are fast, intuitive and simple to use. They give users the data that they need at their fingertips.

Business Discovery is about self-service Business Intelligence. It enables business users to customize and change analysis to address their exact business problems. Business users get access to the data they need when they need it and they get it fast!

 

Article by Carolyn ClarkCarolyn Clark is Business Intelligence Account Manager at Eureka Solutions and specialises on QlikView Business Intelligence software. Carolyn has a degree in Management Science and has many years’ experience in the software industry focussing on business process management & business insight products.

To get in touch with Carolyn, email carolyn.clark@eurekasolutions.co.uk or call 01355 581 960.

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