By
Steve Ranger
Thursday, April 27 2006 08:31 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39354920,00.htm
Companies are broadening their use of business intelligence tools in an
attempt to get more use out of the huge stores of data they're sitting on.
Eric Rogge, research director with Ventana Research, said companies are
looking to extend the use of these tools further into their organizations.
Speaking at the Information Builders Summit user conference in Orlando, Fla.,
Rogge said: "The new users are the frontline workers that are dealing with daily
operations. There are these little decisions that people make on a daily basis,
hundreds of thousands in an organization.
"Business intelligence, over time, has become economically feasible to be
available to these and others out there."
According to a survey of 1,400 CIOs published by analyst Gartner earlier this
year, business
intelligence is the top technology priority in 2006, with CIOs planning to
increase their budgets by 4.8 percent.
Dan Vesset, IDC business analytics software research director, said a new
phase of business intelligence has started in which people are more reliant on
such tools to guide the operations of their companies. This also means companies
have to think about delivering this information in different ways.
"There are more users coming on board for BI, and that means there is a
requirement for new types of user interfaces," Vesset said.
Forrester Research analyst Keith Giles put it more bluntly: "The new users of
business intelligence (are) everyone that makes a business decision," he said.
"Frankly they could (not) care less about how to build a query."
David Small, vice president of international operations at Information
Builders, said companies are looking to get more useful information out of their
internal systems: "What happened for many users is that they have implemented
transactional systems like ERP and now they have all this information available
and they want to make use of it."
He added that if companies can push business intelligence deeper into the
organization they'll get a better return on investment than if they just give it
to "the analysts and the people on the board."
At the user conference, Information Builders showcased a number of
initiatives aimed at capitalizing on these trends. One initiative seeks to embed
business intelligence more easily into business processes to help workers make better decisions.
Another, called Active Reports, allows some analytical capabilities to be
embedded in Web pages so that workers can interact with reports in e-mails or
browsers without being connected to the report server.
Steve Ranger reported for London-based Silicon.com.