Introduction of BI
Introduction of BI
INTELLIGENCE
Introduction of Business
Intelligence
CHANGING BUSINESS
ENVIRONMENT
ompanies are moving aggressively to computerized
support of their operations => Business Intelligence
BUSINESS PRESSURES
RESPONSESSUPPORT
MODEL
THE BUSINESS
ENVIRONMENT
he environment in which organizations operate today is
becoming more and more complex, creating:
opportunities, and
problems
Example: globalization
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
FACTORS
FACTOR
Markets
Consumer
demand
Technology
Societal
DESCRIPTION
Strong competition
Expanding global markets
Blooming electronic markets on the Internet
Innovative marketing methods
Opportunities for outsourcing with IT support
Need for real-time, on-demand transactions
Desire for customization
Desire for quality, diversity of products, and speed of delivery
Customers getting powerful and less loyal
More innovations, new products, and new services
Increasing obsolescence rate
Increasing information overload
Social networking, Web 2.0 and beyond
Growing government regulations and deregulation
Workforce more diversified, older, and composed of more women
Prime concerns of homeland security and terrorist attacks
Necessity of Sarbanes-Oxley Act and other reporting-related legislation
Increasing social responsibility of companies
Greater emphasis on sustainability
BUSINESS
INTELLIGENCE (BI)
BI is an umbrella term
that combines architectures, tools, databases, analytical tools, applications,
and methodologies
BI is a content-free
expression, so it means different things to different people
BI helps transform
data, to information (and knowledge), to decisions and finally to action
A BRIEF HISTORY OF BI
he term BI was coined by the Gartner Group in the mid-1990s
THE EVOLUTION OF BI
CAPABILITIES
THE ARCHITECTURE OF
BI
BI system has four major components
a data warehouse, with its source data
business analytics, a collection of tools for
manipulating, mining, and analyzing the data in the
data warehouse;
business performance management (BPM) for
monitoring and analyzing performance
a user interface (e.g., dashboard)
A HIGH-LEVEL
ARCHITECTURE OF BI
COMPONENTS IN A BI
The data
ARCHITECTURE
warehouse is a large repository of well-organized historical data
Business
analytics are the tools that allow transformation of data into
information and knowledge
Business
performance management (BPM) allows monitoring, measuring,
and comparing key performance indicators
User
interface (e.g., dashboards) allows access and easy manipulation
of other BI components
STYLES OF BI
icroStrategy, Corp. distinguishes five styles of BI and offers tools
for each
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
THE BENEFITS OF BI
he ability to provide accurate information
when needed, including a real-time view of
the corporate performance and its parts