Improve business decision making and minimize cost by selecting only the most important BI capabilities.
Your Challenge
The CIO has difficulty sifting through the wide array of BI capabilities available in the market and mapping them to the enterprise’s BI needs.
The CIO juggles factors such as high non-discretionary spend, proliferation of BI applications, and inability to adapt legacy applications while attempting to revamp their set of enterprise BI tools.
Our Advice
Critical Insight
The CIO is responsible and accountable for providing the business with accurate information. All it takes is just one bad business decision to begin preparing for your not too distant job search. Involve the Head of BI in developing a BI tool strategy.
BI 2.0 (advanced) capabilities (predictive, real-time, social and big data analytics) are being used more than ever. Organizations are adopting them as they provide significant opportunity to gain a competitive advantage. If the business isn’t demanding these capabilities now, they will soon. Plan for BI 2.0 capabilities now before the organization falls behind.
Impact and Result
Generate a customized set of recommended BI capabilities by conducting a BI profile and workgroup needs assessment.
Develop custom BI capability maps based on each BI capability’s gap magnitude.
Accelerate improvement definition by using Info-Tech’s improvement initiatives mapped to every BI capability.
Track improvements using a tool.
Measure BI performance using a recommended set of KPIs.
Info-Tech provides use cases and analog statements for BI capabilities to facilitate IT-business communication.
B.COM Unit – 4 ( CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY ( CSR ).pptx
Develop a Business Intelligence Tool Strategy
1. The CIO is responsible and accountable for providing the business with accurate information. All it takes is just one bad business decision to begin
preparing for your not too distant job search. Involve the Head of BI in developing a BI tool strategy. BI related problems exist throughout all aspects
of the enterprise. Some include: Large number of inaccurate business decisions are made using BI tools. Increasing inability of adapting legacy
applications and systems to meet new BI needs. Proliferation of BI tools, redundant BI tools, e.g. applications with overlapping capabilities and
similar purposes. Large number of data stores, multiple “sources of truth” for the same piece of data. Disengaged, unsatisfied, and unproductive
business end users. The toy box is open; improve BI 1.0 (basic) capabilities and plan for BI 2.0 (advanced) capabilities to meet new demand. BI 2.0
capabilities (predictive, real-time, social and big data analytics) are being used more than ever. Organizations are adopting them as they provide
significant opportunity to gain a competitive advantage. If the business isn’t demanding these capabilities now, they will soon. Plan for BI 2.0
capabilities now before the organization falls behind. Business users are becoming more tech-savvy and self-service oriented. IT needs to refocus its
efforts on helping the business plan its information strategy, provide the business with more self-service tools, and continuously govern data to
ensure high data quality. Don’t begin the BI journey with tools. Limit the modeling of BI tool benefits to an indicative business case. Although
investing in BI tools can significantly reduce time to information (and therefore costs), the largest benefit are the insights obtained from accurate
information, which are invaluable. Utilize use cases to facilitate the discussion between IT and business users. Use cases bridge communication gaps
between IT and the business by outlining how specific tasks and scenarios map to different BI capabilities. Access Appendix: Use Cases & Analogies
for a list of use cases for each BI capability. Empower end users throughout this project by allowing them to help IT select BI capabilities. This will
help drive user adoption, satisfaction, and productivity since they will be working with these BI capabilities closely. Learn to embrace Microsoft
Office. Integrate Excel with BI platforms to improve productivity and limit data duplication. Ensure Excel is only used to analyze data, not to create
new data sets. All BI stakeholders should have influence over when IT should reassess BI tools. Continuously educate BI stakeholders on the BI
market space. Investing time educating the business now saves more time latertrying to explain BI tools and the associated benefits.