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What is Business Intelligence? |
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Business intelligence (BI), relates to
the intelligence as information valued for its currency and relevance.
It is expert information, knowledge and technologies efficient in the
management of organizational and individual business. Therefore, in
this sense, business intelligence is a broad category of applications
and technologies for gathering, providing access to, and analyzing
data for the purpose of helping enterprise users make better business
decisions. The term implies having a comprehensive knowledge of all of
the factors that affect your business. It is imperative that you have
an in depth knowledge about factors such as your customers,
competitors, business partners, economic environment, and internal
operations to make effective and good quality business decisions.
Business intelligence enables you to make these kinds of decisions.
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A specialized field of business intelligence known as competitive
intelligence focuses solely on the external competitive environment.
Information is gathered on the actions of competitors and decisions
are made based on this information. Little if any attention is paid to
gathering internal information. Reasons for Business Intelligence
Business Intelligence enables organizations to make well informed
business decisions and thus can be the source of competitive
advantages. This is especially true when you are able to extrapolate
information from indicators in the external environment and make
accurate forecasts about future trends or economic conditions. Once
business intelligence is gathered effectively and used proactively you
can make decisions that benefit your organization before the
competition does.
The ultimate objective of business intelligence is to improve the
timeliness and quality of information. Timely and good quality
information is like having a crystal ball that can give you an
indication of what's the best course to take. Business intelligence
reveals to you:
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The position of your firm as in comparison to its competitors |
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Changes in customer behaviour and spending patterns |
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The capabilities of your firm |
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Market conditions, future trends, demographic and economic
information |
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The social, regulatory, and political environment |
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What the other firms in the market are doing |
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You can then deduce from the information gathered what adjustments
need to be made.
Businesses realize that in this very competitive, fast paced, and
ever-changing business environment, a key competitive quality is how
quickly they respond and adapt to change. Business intelligence
enables them to use information gathered to quickly and constantly
respond to changes. Benefits of Business Intelligence
Business Intelligence provides many benefits to companies utilizing it. It can eliminate a
lot of the guesswork within an organization, enhance communication among
departments while coordinating activities, and enable companies to respond
quickly to changes in financial conditions, customer preferences, and
supply chain operations.
Business Intelligence improves the overall performance of the
company using it.
Information is often regarded as the second most important resource a
company has (a company's most valuable assets are its people). So when a
company can make decisions based on timely and accurate information, the
company can improve its performance.
Business Intelligence also expedites decision-making, as
acting quickly and correctly on information before competing businesses do
can often result in competitively superior performance. It can also
improve customer experience, allowing for the timely and appropriate
response to customer problems and priorities.
Factors Influencing Business Intelligence
Customers are the most critical aspect to a company's success. Without
them a company cannot exist. So it is very important that you have
information on their preferences. You must quickly adapt to their changing
demands. Business Intelligence enables you to gather information on the
trends in the marketplace and come up with innovative products or services
in anticipation of customer's changing demands.
Competitors can be a huge hurdle on your way to success. Their objectives
are the same as yours and that is to maximize profits and customer
satisfaction. In order to be successful you must stay one step ahead of
your competitors. In business you don't want to play the catch up game
because you would have lost valuable market share. Business Intelligence
tells you what actions your competitors are taking, so you can make better
informed decisions.
Business Partners must possess the same strategic information you have so
that there is no miscommunication that can lead to inefficiencies. For
example it is common now for businesses to allow their suppliers to see
their inventory levels, performance metrics, and other supply chain data
in order to collaborate to improve supply chain management. With Business
Intelligence you and your business partners can share the same
information.
Economic Environment such as the state of the economy and other key
economic indicators are important considerations when making business
decisions. You don't want to roll out a new line of products during an
economic recession. BI gives you information on the state of the economy
so that you can make prudent decisions as to when is the right time to
maybe expand or scale back your business operations.
Internal Operations are the day to day activities that go on in your
business. You need an in depth knowledge about the internal workings of
your business from top to bottom. If you make an arbitrary decision
without knowing how your entire organization works it could have negative
affects on your business. BI gives you information on how your entire
organization works.
Technology
Business intelligence provides organizational data in such a way that the
organizational knowledge filters can easily associate with this data and
turn it into information for the organization. Persons involved in
business intelligence processes may use application software and other
technologies to gather, store, analyze, and provide access to data, and
present that data in a simple, useful manner. The software aids in
business performance management, and aims to help people make "better"
business decisions by making accurate, current, and relevant information
available to them when they need it. Some businesses use data warehouses
because they are a logical collection of information gathered from various
operational databases for the purpose of creating business intelligence.
Technology Requirements
For the
Business Intelligence system to work effectively, enterprises must address the
following technical issues:
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Security and specified user access to the warehouse |
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Data volume (capacity) |
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How long data will be stored (data retention) |
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Benchmark and performance targets |
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Software Types
People working in business intelligence have developed tools that ease the
work, especially when the intelligence task involves gathering and
analyzing large quantities of unstructured data. Each vendor typically
defines Business Intelligence their own way, and markets tools to do
Business Intelligence
the way that they see it.
Business intelligence includes tools in various categories, but the ones
that we are able to help you with include the
following:
History
An early reference to non-business intelligence occurs in Sun Tzu's The
Art of War. Sun Tzu claims that to succeed in war, one should have full
knowledge of one's own strengths and weaknesses and full knowledge of
one's enemy's strengths and weaknesses. Lack of either one might result in
defeat. A certain school of thought draws parallels between the challenges
in business and those of war, specifically:
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collecting data |
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discerning patterns and meaning in the data (generating
information) |
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responding to the resultant information |
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Prior to the start of the Information Age in the late 20th century,
businesses sometimes struggled to collect data from non-automated sources.
Businesses then lacked the computing resources to properly analyze the
data, and often made business decisions primarily on the basis of
intuition.
As businesses started automating more and more systems, more and more data
became available. However, collection remained a challenge due to a lack
of infrastructure for data exchange or to incompatibilities between
systems. Analysis of the data that was gathered and reports on the data
sometimes took months to generate. Such reports allowed informed long-term
strategic decision-making. However, short-term tactical decision-making
continued to rely on intuition.
In modern businesses, increasing standards, automation, and technologies
have led to vast amounts of data becoming available. Data warehouse
technologies have set up repositories to store this data. Improved
Extract, transform, load (ETL) and even recently Enterprise Application
Integration tools have increased the speedy collecting of data. OLAP
reporting technologies have allowed faster generation of new reports which
analyze the data. Business intelligence has now become the art of sifting
through large amounts of data, extracting pertinent information, and
turning that information into knowledge upon which actions can be taken.
Business intelligence software incorporates the ability to mine data,
analyze, and report. Some modern BI software allow users to cross-analyze
and perform deep data research rapidly for better analysis of sales or
performance on an individual, department, or company level. In modern
applications of business intelligence software, managers are able to
quickly compile reports from data for forecasting, analysis, and business
decision making.
In 1989 Howard Dresner, a Research Fellow at Gartner Group popularized
"BI" as an umbrella term to describe a set of concepts and methods to
improve business decision-making by using fact-based support systems.
Future of Business Intelligence
In this rapidly changing world consumers are now demanding quicker more
efficient service from businesses. To stay competitive, companies must
meet or exceed the expectations of consumers. Companies will have to rely
more heavily on their business intelligence systems to stay ahead of
trends and future events. Business intelligence users are beginning to
demand Real time Business Intelligence or near real time analysis relating
to their business, particularly in frontline operations. They will
come to expect up to date and fresh information in the same fashion as
they monitor stock quotes online. Monthly and even weekly analysis
will not suffice.
In the not too distant future companies will become dependent on real
time business information in much the same fashion as people come to
expect to get information on the internet in just one or two clicks.
Also in the near future business information will become more democratized
where end users from throughout the organization will be able to view
information on their particular segment to see how it's performing.
So, in the future, the capability requirements of business intelligence
will increase in the same way that consumer expectations increase. It is
therefore imperative that companies increase at the same pace or even
faster to stay competitive.
Key performance indicators
Business Intelligence often uses Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) to assess the present
state of business and to prescribe a course of action. More and more
organizations have started to make more data available more promptly. In
the past, data only became available after a month or two, which did not
help managers to adjust activities in time to hit Wall Street targets.
Recently, banks have tried to make data available at shorter intervals and
have reduced delays.
The KPI methodology was further expanded with the Chief Performance
Officer methodology which incorporated KPIs and root cause analysis into a
single methodology.
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References |
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Information is taken in whole, or in part, from
Wikipedia,
The Free Encyclopedia - which is a fully independent knowledge resource
that has no affiliation with Select Business Solution. As a
result, Select Business Solutions takes no responsibility for
the accuracy. If you believe the information is wrong, please
contact us and we will investigate. |
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Learn More |
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Contact Us today.
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