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Eight levels of analytics

Eight levels of analytics

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 29 Oct 2009 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

You may have two, three or even four levels of analytics at your business. But are you using the ones that really matter? SAS outlines the eight levels of analytics at an invitation-only event in Vegas

LAS VEGAS – Analytics is “the most used and abused term in the marketplace right now,” according to Jim Davis, senior vice-president and chief marketing officer of SAS Institute Inc.

Speaking at SAS’s Premier Business Leadership Series in Las Vegas, an invitation-only event for senior executives, Davis questioned whether there is “a vendor or supplier out there today that doesn’t have analytics.”

“Everybody has analytics,” he said. But what they are actually offering in terms of analytic capacity in support of solving business problems remains in question.

“So you bring all the data together and you put it in some form in which the end user can gain access to it, but what are you doing with it?” he asked. 

There are eight levels of analytics, according to Davis. The first four encompass what he considers “the classic definition of business intelligence” and what the majority of organizations are actually doing.

What the first four levels all have in common is that they look at past activity, Davis pointed out. “They support reactive decision-making … understanding the facts after things occurred and now reacting,” he said. 

The last four levels, which support pro-active decision-making, keep innovation and optimization on track. These are predictive in nature and keep things “headed in the right direction,” he said.

It is the last four that “are really going to help change the future” for business, said Davis.

But analytics alone doesn’t guarantee success for an organization.

To actually solve business problems, companies must address areas of data integration, analytics, report the results and put it all in the context of a business solution, according to Davis.

While this requires a framework to capture data and allow people to gain access to that data on a consistent basis, “it’s not about simply building a data warehouse and putting a BI front end on it,” he said.

“It’s not about going out and buying the fastest database or the coolest interface or the best piece of hardware. It’s about solving a very focused business problem,” said Davis.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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