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JUN 9, 2009 12:48pm ET

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No Data Warehouse Required: BI Reporting Extends Its Reach

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It’s rare these days to find clients who haven’t already decided on a standard BI platform. Most of the new BI tool discussions we get into with clients are with companies who’ve decided that it’s time to broaden their horizons beyond Microsoft.  

The dirty little secret in most companies is that the BI reporting team has morphed into a de-facto enterprise reporting team. Why is this? 

When it comes to reporting, there’s a difference between the BI team and the rest of IT. The fact is that BI teams are successful not because of the infrastructure technologies, but because of the technologies in front of the users: the actual BI tool. To the end user, data visualization and access are much more important than database management and storage infrastructure. So when a new operational system is introduced, users expect the same functionality, look and feel as their other reports.  

An insurance company we’re working with is replacing its operational systems. The company’s management has already decided not to use the vendor’s reports — they’re too limited and brittle. They expect these reports to dovetail into the company’s information portal and work alongside their BI reporting. Companies are refreshing their operational platforms every seven to ten years. It’s now 2009, and the last time they refreshed their operational systems was in reaction to Y2K. It’s once again time to revisit those operational systems. 

If you look at the challenges BI tool vendors are facing, there is limited growth in data warehousing. Most companies have standardized their BI tool suite. Absent disruptive technology or new functionality, there’s limited growth opportunity for BI tools in the data warehousing space.  

But for every data warehouse or data mart within a company, there are likely dozens of operational systems that users need access to. The opportunity for BI vendors now is delivering operational information to business users. This isn’t about complex analytics or advanced computation. This is the retrieval of operational information from where it lives. 

Evan Levy's blog can also be found at http://baseline-consulting.typepad.com/evanlevy/.

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Comments (13)
Evan - great post and I agree with your comments. Although it is about immediate visualization and not about complex analytics, I believe some easy-to-use analytics can be beneficial for decision makers. I've blogged about this here http://mydials.com/newsroom/dialedin/2009/06/16/bi-is-growing-strongly-but-whats-next/#more-181
Posted by Wayne M | Tuesday, June 16 2009 at 12:38PM ET
Evan, I agree! We have recently delivered a BI solution that joins Data Warehouse data and Operational Data from our ordering system in a MSAS Cube. We did this because we couldn't wait for the ETL team to get the data into the DW. Is this becomming the norm? If you don't use a cube, is there a performance concern about retrieving operational information from where it lives? Should the data be replicated to an ODS or updated regularly into an OLAP Cube?
Posted by margie L | Tuesday, June 16 2009 at 1:40PM ET
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Blog Archive for Evan Levy

The Time Has Come for Enterprise Search
The Problem with Total Cost of Ownership
Complex Event Processing: Challenging Real-Time ETL
The Flaw of the Data Inventory
So You Think You’re Ready for a Data Warehouse Appliance, Part 2

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