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By Shashank Garg | Jan 2011

Business Intelligence Trends. By Shashank Garg | Jan 2011. Agenda. State of Business Intelligence Business Intelligence Trends What are our customers asking for?. The State of Business Intelligence. State of Business Intelligence.

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By Shashank Garg | Jan 2011

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  1. Business Intelligence Trends By Shashank Garg | Jan 2011

  2. Agenda • State of Business Intelligence • Business Intelligence Trends • What are our customers asking for?

  3. The State of Business Intelligence

  4. State of Business Intelligence • Data Warehousing has been around in some fashion for nearly 40 years and BI for nearly 20. • Other technology disciplines have evolved in dramatic ways over the same timeframe • Applications from Distributed -> Client Server -> Web • Web from Static Content ->Simple Applications -> Web 2.0 -> Web 3.0 • Land Line -> Brick Phone -> Clam Shell -> Razor -> iPhone • BI has remained relatively “the same” • Historical • Slow to implement • Focuses on “Slice and Dice” • Little advancement in terms of decision support

  5. State of Business Intelligence • We are in the age of Big Data • Expectations from data consumers are unlimited data and timely access • There is no way for organizations to “manage” the data • We need to be able to pull what we want and connect the dots quickly • Decision makers want to drive, not be driven

  6. Business Intelligence Trends

  7. Event-Driven BI The Challenge • There is too much data • Trend lines do not change – historical data is no longer news • Changes in the data, especially the closer you get to real-time information, can be highly volatile • Changes in the direction of data can be important, but it can be hard to assume what is a significant change and which isn’t The Trend • Event driven alerting • “Event” means that the change in the data is significant. Something else is happening to affect the change • Determined by using simple statistical analysis such as correlations, t scores and confidence intervals

  8. Predictive Analytics The Challenge • Historical data holds only so much value • Organizations know the information in their BI systems can serve as headlights instead of rear-view mirrors • Decision makers want the data to tell them what to do The Trend • Applying predictive analytic models to historical data to give answers to these questions: • Where is this current trend taking us? • What are the key variables in the data that move our KPI’s in the right direction and vice versa? • Where should we be focusing our time and energy? • Which of our customers should we be targeting with what products?

  9. Open Source BI and On-Demand BI The Challenge • The economy has taken its toll on corporate mindset and budgets • “Do more with less” The Trend • Open Source business intelligence solutions growth is outpacing the market • BI software-as-a-service (or On-Demand BI) giving companies best-in-class BI operations without the licensing and payroll overhead • BI just when you need it

  10. Quiz! How much data exists in our digital universe? Answer: 1.2 Zettabytes (1,200,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes)

  11. How Much Data Is Out There?

  12. How Much Data Is Out There?

  13. How Much Data in 2010

  14. Predicted Data Universe For 2020 • By 2020, the amount of data in the digital universe will be 35 ZB. • The vast majority of the data will not be generated by companies, but they will want access to it.

  15. Crowdsourced BI, Text Mining, Mashups and DaaS The Challenge • Data is the new oil and companies do not own most of it • Consumers are creating a wealth of information that is more valuable than what companies can create on their own • Most companies do not know how to get to it or know what to do with it if the could • The vast majority of the value is hidden in unstructured data The Trend • Crowdsourced BI – Leveraging the huge, high-quality social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Yelp! and Foursquare to identify trends, measure marketing messages, brand awareness, etc.

  16. Crowdsourced BI, Text Mining, Mashups and DaaS (cont.) The Trend • Text Mining – The ability to turn textual, unstructured data into quantifiable and tagged data sets that are customized to a company • Mashups – Pulling and integrating data from multiple social networks, web 2.0 and other external sources in real-time • Data-as-a-Service – The emergence of external conformed, cleaned data on demand that can be easily custom tagged and integrated with an organization's own data. • Management and QA of the data is no longer a cost to the organization • Easier integration points with BI, ETL and MDM tools • Pay for just the data you need and for how long you need it

  17. Advanced Visualizations The Challenge • The volume of data is overwhelming for decision makers • Easy to get lost in the details • Need to interact with the data for real time analysis • The delay between question and answer is too long • BI tools are still too complicated for the business users The Trend • Advanced Visualizations • Goodbye spreadsheets – tired of getting lost in the data • iPhone, iPad, ClikView, Flex, etc. – driving the visualization revolution • Power to the people – analysis where it needs to happen

  18. Quiz! What is the #1 Business Intelligence tool in the world today? Answer:

  19. Meta Data Management The Challenge • Companies continue with unresolved QA issues • More data, different sources • Data quality and management are not strengths • Disparate data repositories, sets and silos will grow The Trend • Quality will need to get better • Integration between many data sources will become more like plug-n-play • Metadata information must be business centric, end-user perspective and JWINTKRWINTKI (Just-What-I-Need-To-Know-Right-When-I-Need-To-Know-It)…this is why the acronym JIT caught on much faster

  20. What are our customers asking for? Advanced Visualization Open Source Crowdsourced Text Mining Mashups Event-Driven Predictive Analytics Data-as-a-Service On-Demand BI

  21. Thank You

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