Historically, the people, processes, and technology that help businesses use data and analytics to make smarter decisions and work more intelligently. More recently, business intelligence refers to the tools for creating reports and dashboards.
Added Perspectives
Business intelligence (BI) and data environments are notoriously heterogeneous and fragmented. Companies have multiple BI tools, each with their own semantic models, portals, file formats, reports, and dashboards. The situation is even more dire on the data side: there are dozens, if not hundreds or thousands of data warehouses, data marts, data sets, and data silos scattered throughout an organization. But rather than fight the fragmentation through enterprise standardization, perhaps it’s wiser to simply go with flow. Ride the wave, instead of swim against it.
- Wayne Eckerson in Webinar slides: Analytics And Data Integration Hub
July 3, 2020 (Speech)
Business intelligence initiatives always include more than just the front end tools. The technical architecture also includes data warehouses and data marts, data integration and data quality components, dictionaries, repositories, and many other technologies. More importantly, organizations should have a proper BI strategy that goes well beyond an architecture blueprint to include non-technical requirements, alignment with the corporate strategy, organizational models, outcome-based priority settings, and a proper roadmap.
- Andreas Bitterer, Carsten Bange, Christian Fuchs, Patrick Keller, Larissa Seidler in BARC Score Business Intelligence: Enterprise-Wide BI Platform Deployments
April 2, 2016 (Whitepaper)
Successful business Intelligence (BI) projects require many considerations and much planning. Many organizations focus most of their attention on the technology stack or on designing dashboards. The reality is that software projects require more than just design questions or general requirements gathering to create success. Companies need to look at BI for its potential and develop a project roadmap that deals with all of the components required for the project as opposed to only identifying business and technical requirements without the broader implications.
- Lyndsay Wise in 7 BI Considerations for Midmarket Organizations
March 11, 2015 (Blog)
Relevant Content
Oct 30, 2018 - We’re at the dawn of a new era in decision making made possible by the intersection of business intelligence (BI) and artificial intelligence (AI)....
Mar 30, 2018 - Business intelligence (BI) tools have faced low adoption rates since their inception. And even when users use the tools, there is no guarantee they will...
Related Terms
Unleash The Power Of Your Data
Providing modern, comprehensive data solutions so you can turn data into your most powerful asset and stay ahead of the competition.
Learn how we can help your organization create actionable data strategies and highly tailored solutions.
© Datalere, LLC. All rights reserved