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Reitmans tries on business intelligence application

Reitmans tries on business intelligence application

By:  Shane Schick  On: 09 Jan 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The Canadian retailer is hoping to unlock the data in its merchandizing systems through a project with QuantiSense. No worries about industry consolidation here

Canadian retailer Reitmans isn’t letting the consolidation within the business intelligence sector get in the way of its plan to get a better handle on its merchandizing data.

The Montreal-based firm, which also owns Smart-Set, RW & Co, Penningtons, Thyme Maternity, Addition-Elle and Cassis, is deploying an application designed exclusively for retailers running business intelligence (BI) software and data warehouses by Atlanta, Ga.-based QuantiSense.

Reitmans will use the QuantiSense’s visualization layer to examine operational information sourced from its Oracle database through dashboards. QuantiSense’s Playbooks, product, meanwhile, will offer best practices to determine what the retailer should do with the information it learns.

Diane Randolph, Reitman’s vice-president of information systems, said the company has been using business intelligence software from Microstrategy for years, and Quantisense’s applications were developed to work with the Microstrategy platform. While the company’s allocation teams and core merchandisers have been using retail BI products from Oracle, the project will bring a level of analytics its store operations teams have not experienced before.

“In the first phase, (the metrics) are going to be the reduction in manual effort required to collate and compile and produce and distribute these reports,” she said. “We want to see how much time are we saving from the operations analyst – removing that non-value-added activity.”

The BI space saw a number of mergers and acquisitions last year, including Oracle’s purchase of Hyperion, SAP’s purchase of Business Objects and IBM’s takeover of Ottawa-based Cognos Inc. SAP has also focused on retail-specific BI with the acquisition of Toronto’s Triversity a few years ago. Randolph said she’s not worried about the long-term shakeout.

“I’ve given up trying to forecast who is going to be acquired by whom. We just have to make the best decision based on the situation at the time,” she said.

QuantiSense CEO Jeff Buck said the company’s products handle the data loading from store systems onto a central location running off a database. It also handles the data modelling and BI components based on Microstrategy’s product line. This means it can be agnostic in regards to other enterprise software, such as Oracle’s and even various data warehouse vendors such as Teradata.


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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