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Acquiring Business Intelligence is Crucial

White Paper Published By: NetSuite

But what is "BI" and how do small/mid size business owners acquire it without too much cost?  This Executive White Paper will outline the issues and solutions for the "BI" requirements of growing companies.



Tags : 
analytics, business analytics, bi, business intelligence, bi tools, business planning, erp data, netsuite

NetSuite
Published:  Nov 27, 2007
Type:  White Paper
Length:  11 pages





Actionable Analytics:

Creating Competitive Advantage in
Growing and Mid-Sized Businesses
with Business Intelligence A White Paper for Today's Growing Businesses June 2007
Title
Actionable Analytics: Creating Competitive Advantage in Growing and Mid-Sized Businesses with Business Intelligence
Introduction No matter what your position is in your business ? a CEO, CFO, Sales VP, or line of business manager, you need information to base your daily decisions upon. And you need to rely on the accuracy and completeness of that information to confidently make decisions that are right for your business. "Business intelligence" (BI) is no longer just the bastion of the very big companies, who can afford elaborate data warehouses to replicate their operational data and then send a staff of statisticians and business analysts to attempt to derive good information from those warehouses. The warehouse model is just not viable for most growing businesses. "Continued stories about cost and time overruns continue to be a gating factor for smaller firms that understand the benefits of data warehousing projects," said Brad Marshall, Director of Commercial Products at Teksouth, a provider of data management and analysis systems. "They know the value that BI/DW systems can bring, but are scared by the prospects of the projects turning into a never-ending time and money pit, without clear deadlines in place that they know 1will be met. " Eschewing the cost and complexity of data warehousing then, growing businesses today are often stymied by the quality of the data they can obtain. Large or small, businesses require data about their operations that is both accurate and timely. They require real-time, actionable business intelligence for proactive management rather than the "management by hindsight." This Executive White Paper will outline the issues, the business ramifications, and the solutions for the business intelligence requirements of growing companies. Key Definitions When industry analysts and writers talk about "business intelligence," what exactly are they talking about? If my financial package can create a report, is that business intelligence? What about Excel? Is a spreadsheet business intelligence? And are all numbers "analytics"? First, all numbers are not analytics nor do they necessarily lead to any kind of "intelligence." There are some clear definitional criteria that we can use to ensure we are really talking about BI. 1. Business intelligence is synthesized information that allows you to make an executive decision. It is not a list or just a single report of figures. Raw data is not necessarily business intelligence. Data has to be compiled or synthesized to become useful mission-critical information. Business intelligence is intended to provide foresight ? not just reveal history. 1 Survey: Data Warehousing Professionals Still Anticipate Cost, Time Overruns in Projects by Almost 2-1 Margin. Reported in PR Newswire. March 19, 2007.
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NetSuite
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Title 2. Business intelligence is derived from real-time data. For true executive decision-making, the data used has to be up-to-the-minute real time data in order to accurately represent the state of the business. In today's modern businesses, even yesterday's data is "old" ? and in many fast-moving businesses, data a few hours old is too dated to make decisions upon. Batching data to upload it to a corporate computer, as one example, leads to the aged, out-of-date information that leads to faulty decisions. Data warehousing, as another example, replicates business data on separate databases, and by definition is not real-time. 3. Business intelligence, to be useful, stems from data derived from the integration of all key business processes. Your business has many interconnected facets: accounting, sales, manufacturing, warehousing, purchasing, bill collecting, management of your staff, your customers, your suppliers, and your partners. For your conclusions to be accurate, they must be the result of reliably accurate data collected and synthesized from all those facets of your business. Your business is "end-to-end" ? your ability to extract c... [download for more]

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