Title: Business Intelligence
1Business Intelligence
2Business Intelligence
- A set of technologies and processes that use data
to understand and analyze business performance
(Davenport and Harris, 2007). - Business information and business analyses within
the context of key business processes that lead
to decisions and actions and that result in
improved business performance (Williams and
Williams, 2007).
3Business Intelligence
Business Information
Business Analyses
Business Decisions
In the Context of Core Business Processes
Increased Sales,Reduced Costs, andIncreased
Profits
4Extent of BI Adoption
5Analytical Application Domains
6Application Platforms
7Examples
- Western Digital uses BI to better manage its
inventory, supply chains, product lifecycles, and
customer relationships. BI has enabled the
company to reduce operating costs by 50. - Capital One uses BI to analyze and improve
profitability of its product lines as well as
effectiveness of its business processes and
marketing programs. - Continental Airlines invested 30 million in BI
to improve its business processes and customer
service. Continental says it has reaped a 500
million return.
8BI Drivers
- Abundance of data
- ERP Systems
- Inexpensive storage
- Ease of collection
- Network infrastructure
- Web technologies
- Mature data warehouse technologies
- Powerful and easy to use analytical software
- Need to squeeze as much as possible from business
processes - Recent Accenture study that found that nine in 10
senior executives at Fortune 1000 companies place
strong analytical and business intelligence
capabilities at the top of their list in
preparing them for their biggest challenge ahead
9What does BI Include?
- Data warehouses, data marts
- Reporting, querying
- Dashboards, scorecards
- Forecasting, statistical analysis
- Simulation, optimization models
- Measurement
- Process reengineering
- Business Process Management (BPM)
10BI and Analytics
Whats the best that can happen?
Optimization
Predictive modeling
What will happen next?
Analysis
Competitive Advantage
Forecasting/extrapolation
What if these trends continue?
Statistical analysis
Why is this happening?
Alerts
What actions are needed?
Query/drill down
Where exactly is the problem?
Access and Reporting
How many, how often, where?
Ad hoc reports
Standard reports
What happened?
Degree of Intelligence
11Corporate Information Factory
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12Closed Loop Analytical Process (Vesset, 2003)
Analyze
Track
Analytical
Transaction-Oriented
Model
Act
Decide
13Entity-Relationship Model
E-R model includes allthe processes of an
organization includingmany that do not
intersect in the real world
14Dimensional Modeling
- The goal of dimensional modeling is to create an
intuitive representation of the data that is
optimized for high-performance access - Essentially an E-R model with some restrictions
- A single E-R model breaks down into multiple
dimensional models
15Retail sales process dimensional model
One-to-manyrelationships betweendimensions and
fact table 103 records indimension
tables106 to 109 in facttables Diagram
makes itobvious why themodel is calledthe Star
Schemaor Star Join
16SAP Terminology
- A dimensional model is called an InfoCube
- The facts in the fact table are called Key
Figures - Attributes of the dimensions are called
Characteristics
17Titanic InfoCube
Passenger isnt quite correct because
Classincludes the crew
Counter key figure has the value of 1 for all
records so it can be usedto count the number of
records foreach combination of
characteristicvalues by summing
18ERPSim Market InfoCube
19Business Explorer Suite
- Query Builder
- Analyzer
- Report Designer
- Web Application Designer
- Information Broadcasting
20BEx Analyzer Query Designer
21Analyzer
22Viewing Query in SAP GUI (RSRT)