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IT pros must get smart about analytics: IBM

IT pros must get smart about analytics: IBM

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 10 Feb 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

At a ComputerWorld Canada TechInsights event about driving business innovation with smart analytics, IBM Canada execs say they want to help IT pros deliver to ever-more demanding users as they catch on to analytics. Toyota Canada and T4G share their experience with analytics

TORONTO--Today business intelligence may only reach 15 to 20 per cent of an organization’s users, but that will explode to 65 per cent in the next five years, said an executive with IBM Canada Ltd.

And as users increasingly get acquainted with these analytic systems, IT pros will have no choice but to deal with the massive flood of queries and data requests that will undoubtedly follow, Realize the Future with HP

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said Jason Gartner, business analytics development executive with IBM Canada.

“Every bit of information you give them they ask for twice more back,” said Gartner. “You give them a global headcount. The next thing they are going to ask is give me a global headcount by geography. All of a sudden, it’s four times the information.”

Gartner spoke at a ComputerWorld Canada TechInsights event about driving business innovation with smart analytics.

As user requests grow exponentially, the daily challenge for IT pros will be to continue to serve those needs, said Gartner. He describes what he calls a “one-way mirror” which separates business users from IT who toil in the background ensuring the data is clean, rationalized and at the granular level users want it.

"(Users) don’t care where the data comes from, they don’t care how you got the data,” said Gartner. 

Also speaking at the event was Glen Sheffield, information management technical specialist with IBM Canada, who said the product landscape has become a lot more complex for IT pros in the last 15 years with all the possible options of databases, analytics, network, storage and servers. “The world got more confusing, there were more choices,” said Sheffield. “It’s time to start thinking about how we’re going to start delivering this in a faster manner.”

For this reason, Sheffield said the next trend among vendors, including IBM, is to address the simplicity of deployment with integrated hardware and analytics. IBM announced precisely this with its Smart Analytics last September. And just last January, Microsoft Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. unveiled what they called a “breakthrough” stack integration of both company portfolios.


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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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