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Getting Business Intelligence Right Six best practices for developing your business intelligence strategy
Magazines are filled these days with stories of business triumphs powered by business intelligence (BI). The good news is that you can believe the hype — BI almost always helps improve performance, and its capabilities are much greater than they were even a few years ago. Getting the most out of your investment, however, is still hard work. A recent Chartered Global Management Accounting (CGMA) survey of financial professionals found that nine out of ten (87%) finance professionals surveyed said Big Data has the potential to change the way business is done. For most, however, it remains more a dream than reality: 86% said their businesses are struggling to get valuable information from their data. What separates the best from the rest? One factor is that they share a well-reasoned BI strategy — an element companies are finding to be nearly as important as the technology itself for gaining the maximum value from their investment.
Six Data Rules
Fortunately, the BI code isn’t impossible to crack. Companies that get their BI strategy right tend to follow six basic rules: 1. They ask the right questions. Successful companies typically develop their BI strategies only after a serious assessment of where analytics could shed the most valuable light. “There’s a lot of hype out there with BI vendors that may cloud what the real value to the customer would be,” says Lee Kilmer, VP, Product Management and Development at Infor. “Businesses have to really know what their problems are and what they’re trying to address. If you don’t have a good handle on that, you could get sucked into the hype.” Executives need to ask: is there one area where knowing more would make the most difference to the business? Once the general area is agreed upon, executives should choose the questions they really want answered. The total amount of business data being generated doubles now every 1.2 years, according to a recent estimate by eMarketer, a research consultancy firm. This rising tide of information may have a counterintuitive consequence in making the ability to focus narrowly on a few key business drivers more important than ever. “It’s not the company with the most data that wins; it’s the company that has the right data,” said Paul Kannemann, an Orlando-based partner of Grant Thornton.1 Other analysts agree that selective data consumption is key. Seventy-six percent of bestin-class companies have the ability to incorporate business drivers into their on-going forecasting process -- more than double the industry average, according to the Aberdeen Group report.2
Karlo A. Bustos CEO & Chief Analyst M: 617.898.7476 E: kbustos@kbrg.co l www.kbrg.co l
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2. They have well-scrubbed numbers. “The big problem is data management and data quality – the front end of the pipeline,” says Gary Cokins, an expert on IT rollouts and author of Predictive Business Analytics: Forward Looking Capabilities to Improve Business Performance (Wiley, 2013). 1 2
TechTarget: “CFO Magazine conference explores CFO role as IT user, manager,” 2013. “Financial Planning, Budgeting and Forecasting: Removing the Hurdles”, March 2013.
Six Best Practices for Developing Your Business Intelligence Strategy
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