Mistake 1. Not putting a strong interdisciplinary team together.
It is impossible to put together an analytics platform without understanding the needs of the customers who will use it. Sounds simple, right? Who wouldn’t do that? You’d be surprised how many analytics projects are wrapped up by IT because “they think” they know the customer needs. Not assembling the right team is clearly the biggest mistake companies make. Many times what is on your mind (and if you’re an IT person willing to admit it) is that you are considering converting all those favorite company reports. Your goal should not be that. Your goal is to create a system—human engineered with customers, financial people, IT folks, analysts, and others—that give people new and exciting ways to look at information. It should give you new insights. New competitive information. If you don’t get the right team put together, you’ll find someone longing for the good old days and their old dusty reports. Or worse yet, still finding ways to generate those old dusty reports.
Mistake 2. Not having the right talent to design, build, run and update your analytics system.
It is undeniable that there is now high demand for business analytics specialists. There are not a lot of them out there that really know what to do unless they’ve been burned a few times and have survived and then built successful BA systems. This is reflected by the fact you see so many analytics vendors offer, or often recommend, third-party consulting and training to help the organization develop their business analytic skills. Work hard to build a three-way partnership between the vendor, your own team, and an implementation partner. If you develop those relationships, risk of failure goes way down.
Top Mistakes to Avoid in Analytics Implementations | StatSlice Business Intelligence an... - 0 views
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Mistake 3. Putting the wrong kind of analyst or designer on the project. This is somewhat related to Mistake 2 but with some subtle differences. People have different skillsets so you need to make sure the person you’re considering to put on the project is the right “kind.” For example, when you put the design together you need both drill-down and summary models. Both have different types of users. Does this person know how to do both? Or, for example, inexperience in an analyst might lead to them believing vendor claims and not be able to verify them as to functionality or time to implement. Mistake 4. Not understanding how clean the data is you are getting and the time frame to get it clean. Profile your data to understand the quality of your source data. This will allow you to adjust your system accordingly to compensate for some of those issues or more importantly push data fixes to your source systems. Ensure high quality data or your risk upsetting your customers. If you don’t have a good understanding of the quality of your data, you could easily find yourself way behind schedule even though the actual analytics and business intelligence framework you are building is coming along fine. Mistake 5. Picking the wrong tools. How often do organizations buy software tools that just sit on the shelve? This often comes from management rushing into a quick decision based on a few demos they have seen. Picking the right analytics tools requires an in-depth understanding of your requirements as well as the strengths and weaknesses of the tools you are evaluating. The best way to achieve this understanding is by getting an unbiased implementation partner to build a proof of concept with a subset of your own data and prove out the functionality of the tools you are considering. Bottom Line. Think things through carefully. Make sure you put the right team together. Have a data cleansing plan. If the hype sounds too good to be true—have someone prove it to you.
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BI Brief - Four Legs of a Successful Business Intelligence (BI) Project Team - 0 views
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1. Project Sponsorship and Governance 2. Project Management 3. Development Team (Core Team) 4. Extended Project Team
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1. Project Sponsorship and Governance IT and the business should form a BI steering committee to sponsor and govern design, development, deployment, and ongoing support. It needs both the CIO and a business executive, such as CFO, COO, or a senior VP of marketing/sales to commit budget, time, and resources. The business sponsor needs the project to succeed. The CIO is committed to what is being built and how.
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2. Project Management Project management includes managing daily tasks, reporting status, and communicating to the extended project team, steering committee, and affected business users. The project management team needs extensive business knowledge, BI expertise, DW architecture background, and people management, project management, and communications skills. The project management team includes three functions or members: Project development manager - Responsible for deliverables, managing team resources, monitoring tasks, reporting status, and communications. Requires a hands-on IT manager with a background in iterative development. Must understand the changes caused by this approach and the impact on the business, project resources, schedule and the trade-offs. Business advisor - Works within the sponsoring business organization. Responsible for the deliverables of the business resources on the project's extended team. Serves as the business advocate on the project team and the project advocate within the business community. Often, the business advocate is a project co-manager who defers to the IT project manager the daily IT tasks but oversees the budget and business deliverables. BI/DW project advisor - Has enough expertise with architectures and technologies to guides the project team on their use. Ensures that architecture, data models, databases, ETL code, and BI tools are all being used effectively and conform to best practices and standards.
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Data Quality, Data Governance, and Master Data Management (MDM) - 0 views
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Modern business applications produce ever more relevant and actionable information for decision makers, but in many cases the data sources are fragmented and inconsistent. Despite tremendous advancements at the application layer, nearly all IT initiatives succeed or fail based on the quality and consistency of the underlying data.
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CIOs are responsible for making information available to their businesses in a consistent and timely basis, but in most organizations, information management is seen as a delegated set of tasks and is not the CIO’s top priority.
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“Key initiatives such as master data management, data virtualization, data quality, data integration and data governance are employed by just a fraction of organizations that should be mastering the science of information management,”
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"Modern business applications produce ever more relevant and actionable information for decision makers, but in many cases the data sources are fragmented and inconsistent. Despite tremendous advancements at the application layer, nearly all IT initiatives succeed or fail based on the quality and consistency of the underlying data."
Octavian Pantis, autorul cartii Musai List, vine la Start-Up Wall-Street. Afla cum sa f... - 0 views
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Trainerul Octavian Pantis, managing director TMI Training & Consulting. El este autorul cartii "Musai List", un best-seller in domeniu.
8 Principles That Can Make You an Analytics Rock Star -- TDWI -The Data Warehousing Ins... - 0 views
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Great design, high-quality code, strong business sponsorship, accurate requirements, good project management, and thorough testing are some of the obvious requirements for successful analytics systems.
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As a professional in the field, you must be able to do these things well because they form the foundation of a good analytics implementation.
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Successful analytics professionals should follow a set of guiding principles.
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MicroStrategy Suite | MicroStrategy - 0 views
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Free reporting software Now enhanced for mobile intelligence Perfect solution for departments Scalable as your needs expand For Windows, Unix, Linux, Solaris, HP-UX, and AIX operating systems and any data source, including Hadoop, SAP BW, Microsoft Analysis Services, Essbase, and IBM TM1.
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Simple development and maintenance of Mobile apps and dashboards Powerful Visual Data Discovery capabilities Packed with robust analytics Free online support and training Perpetual license to use forever Quick Start Guide brings you from download through your first report
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"Free Mobile and Business Intelligence Software MicroStrategy's award-winning business intelligence software and mobile app development platform are now available in a convenient free software suite, designed for departments to start building and using mobile apps, dashboards, and reports quickly and easily... and at no charge."
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13 things to consider when implementing a CRM plan | Econsultancy - 0 views
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These are few of the benefits of implementing a good quality CRM All of your clients’ information is stored in one place, it’s easy to update and share with the whole team. Updates by colleagues should be saved immediately. Every member of your team will be able to see the exact point when your business last communicated with a client, and what the nature of that communication was. CRMs can give you instant metrics on various aspects of your business automatically. Reports can be generated. These can also be used to forecast and plan for the future. You will be able to see the complete history of your company’s interaction with a client. Calendars and diaries can be integrated, relating important events or tasks with the relevant client. Suitable times can be suggested to contact customers and set reminders.
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Finding one system that will fit your needs in one package may not be possible, so be aware that you may need to customise it to fit into your company. There are infinite possibilities here so don’t get too carried away as costs will rise accordingly.
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Ensure that the CRM works on mobile devices and can be accessed remotely. Employees aren’t necessarily sat at their desks when it needs to be used or updated. Real-time updates are necessary for ensuring that clients aren’t contacted twice with the exact same follow up.
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