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Intelligent enterprises need enterprise business intelligence

Intelligent enterprises need enterprise business intelligence

By:  Rosie Lombardi  On: 28 Mar 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Business intelligence (BI) is overtaking security as the number one issue for senior executives searching for that competitive edge. To generate useable, forward-looking information, BI requires its own integrated platform and an enterprise-wide approach to ensure consistency in the data and the underlying assumptions used to evaluate it.

These enhancements represent phase three of SAS’ long-term strategy, said Jim Davis, senior vice-president and chief marketing officer at SAS.

In the early years, SAS focused on developing a range of tools to access disparate data and to analyze it. During the 1995-2000 period, the company focused on expanding horizontally in response to customer demand to consolidate and reduce the number of software vendors involved in mission-critical applications. Since 2000, SAS has been focusing on developing tailored industry offerings to solve specific business problems within data-intensive sectors.

As a private firm, SAS can funnel funds into these types of long-range R&D initiatives to evolve its products without worrying about meeting quarterly earnings expectations to please Wall Street, he said. “The marriage of software development with publicly traded companies has not been good,” said Davis, pointing out that most of SAS’ revenue comes from existing clients, not new sales.

Tedious data mining and static reports have had their day, according to recent industry reports presented at the conference. Performance-tracking dashboards may be proliferating across enterprises nowadays, but this is a dangerous trend, said Davis.

Lack of consistent metrics across the enterprise can create problems, and lack of drill-down capabilities means users are unable to examine and understand the context of performance information. “I predict ‘Why dashboards fail’ will be the headline at the end of this year,” he said.










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Rosie Lombardi Rosie Lombardi is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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You, SME, and everyone you know
i had thought my data entry days were behind me. oh, how wrong i was. my employer is working on a database that’s filled with useful information about the it industry, and the back end of the platform is up and running. i’ve worked on directory systems before, and i can say without being biased that this is a pretty well-designed interface. they’ve also loaded in the content, but i
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