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Canadian BI vendor builds ‘Crystal 2.0’

Canadian BI vendor builds ‘Crystal 2.0’

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 16 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Vancouver-based Indicee is building on its Crystal Report DNA with a tool that sits atop existing reporting infrastructures so users don’t have to think about data sources like Crystal Reports

The risk of an offering that sits atop existing infrastructure, as Indicee does, is that if the underlying data structures are of poor quality, then the BI will be of little value, said Levy.

According Nigel Wallis, research director with Toronto-based IDC Canada Ltd., it is tougher for companies with multiple legacy applications to access their data warehouses for that integrated view. “This is a big issue for medium-sized firms, which often use custom- and in-house- built applications,” said Wallis.

The hosted element is attractive too, said Wallis. An IDC Canada survey from summer of 2009 shows that seven per cent of respondents would prefer accessing BI tools through a hosted version, a number Wallis expects to grow.

As a new entrant onto the BI market, Cunningham said Indicee is focusing primarily on the small-to-medium business market where formal BI tools typically don’t exist.

But Cunningham isn’t completely ruling out the enterprise space because he believes there is opportunity in those underserved departments where BI tools are leaving some people out. “You’ve got the call centre and HR guys over in the corner saying, 'When are you going to get my data in the data warehouse?'” he said.

He thinks the “enterprise world has been beaten up by big BI vendors,” the likes of Oracle Corp. and SAP AG.

But as a new entrant, Cunningham likes that Indicee can be nimble. He said large BI vendors like Business Objects (as part of SAP), and any big enterprise software vendor for that matter, won’t do well in “that big machine.”

“If Business Objects/SAP really wants to kill midmarket, they need to start a new company,” he joked.

The cycle of consolidation is such that smaller vendors tend to get swallowed up by larger entities, but Cunningham said that’s not part of his mindset right now.

While the BI market is stable, Levy noted that Web services BI, a subset of that BI space, is still emerging.










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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